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DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1718241
A Rare Case of Transorbital Penetrating Intracranial Injury by a Screw
Penetrating brain injury (PBI) includes all traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) which are not the result of a blunt mechanism.[1] PBI is rare and it is considered as severe TBI. Transorbital penetrating intracranial injuries account for 0.04% of all head injuries.[2]
An 18-year-old male was admitted with history of fall from a truck, leading to a penetrating injury in his left eye from a screw placed on the ground. The screw penetrated through the roof of orbit, causing intracranial injury and dislodgement of bony fragment in right lateral ventricle.
On examination, patient had an extremely painful left eye with perforated globe, periorbital hematoma and complete loss of vision in left eye. His Glasgow coma scale (GCS) score was 15/15 at presentation.
CT brain with orbit ([Fig. 1]) suggested fracture of roof of left orbit with intraorbital herniation of brain tissue through the deficient roof. Blowout fracture of floor of the orbit was also seen, with herniated intraorbital contents into the left maxillary sinus. CT brain ([Fig. 2]) suggested anterior interhemispheric bleed, and bifrontal hemorrhagic contusions with blood in bilateral lateral ventricles. Bony chip was seen in the right lateral ventricle with air droplet.
In civilian accidents, most penetrating cranial injuries are low-velocity type, which are caused by knives, nails, spikes, iron rods, pencil, scissors, or keys. Pathophysiology depends on the kinetic energy and trajectory of the object through the brain. Lower velocity objects produce a track of primary tissue damage, resulting in focal localized brain parenchymal injury.
CT scan is useful as it can readily determine the extent of intraparenchymal injury, locate the foreign body, detect trajectory, and identify bony defects in the skull. MRI brain is useful in nonmetallic foreign body injuries.
A patient can develop complications such as brain abscess, encephalitis, meningitis, scalp sepsis, and vascular complications such as pseudoaneurysm; posttraumatic arteriovenous malformation, although uncommon, can occur following penetrating head injury.[3]
Initial emergency treatment involves maintenance of airway, breathing and circulation with local hemostasis. Broad-spectrum antibiotics should be started. Surgery is the definitive treatment with goal of surgery being removal of foreign body and bony fragments with debridement of scalp tissue, cranium, dura, and brain parenchyma along with watertight closure of dura (primarily or with pericranial patch, temporalis fascia).[4] Permanent neurologic deficit associated with such low-velocity penetrating wounds is determined by the degree and location of the initial injury, timing of operative intervention, and avoidance of delayed secondary injury.
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Conflict of Interest
None declared.
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References
- 1 Esposito DP, Walker JP. Contemporary management of penetrating brain injury. Neurosurg Q 2009; 19: 249-254
- 2 Paiva WS, Saad F, Carvalhal ES, De Amorim RL, Figuereido EG, Teeixera MJ. Transorbital stab penetrating brain injury. Report of a case. Ann Ital Chir 2009; 80 (06) 463-465
- 3 Peek-Asa C, McArthur D, Hovda D, Kraus J. Early predictors of mortality in penetrating compared with closed brain injury. Brain Inj 2001; 15 (09) 801-810
- 4 Kelly DF, Nikas DL, Becker DP. Diagnosis and treatment of moderate and severe head injuries in adults. In Youmans JR. ed. Neurological Surgery. 4th ed. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 1996: 1618-718
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Publication History
Article published online:
09 October 2020
© 2020. Neurotrauma Society of India. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial-License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
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References
- 1 Esposito DP, Walker JP. Contemporary management of penetrating brain injury. Neurosurg Q 2009; 19: 249-254
- 2 Paiva WS, Saad F, Carvalhal ES, De Amorim RL, Figuereido EG, Teeixera MJ. Transorbital stab penetrating brain injury. Report of a case. Ann Ital Chir 2009; 80 (06) 463-465
- 3 Peek-Asa C, McArthur D, Hovda D, Kraus J. Early predictors of mortality in penetrating compared with closed brain injury. Brain Inj 2001; 15 (09) 801-810
- 4 Kelly DF, Nikas DL, Becker DP. Diagnosis and treatment of moderate and severe head injuries in adults. In Youmans JR. ed. Neurological Surgery. 4th ed. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 1996: 1618-718