The role of neurosurgical intervention in penetrating spinal injury has not been clearly established. Functional outcome has not been shown to be influenced by operation. In fact, neurosurgical intervention has been shown to potentially increase the risk of serious complications. This paper examines a unique subset of patients with penetrating spinal injury-those secondary to shotguns. An analysis of five such cases and a review of the limited literature on the subject suggests that neurosurgical intervention is of limited value in such injuries and that initial management should focus primarily upon non-neurological injuries.
A 43-year-old healthy Amish man presented to the emergency department with a history of blunt trauma to the chest following a horse kick. The blunt trauma happened 6 hours before presentation. He also reported loss of consciousness for a brief period of 5 minutes. After regaining consciousness, he experienced constant dull ache in his chest that radiated to his left shoulder. He presented to the emergency department for further evaluation. He was a tobacco user and there was no family history of coronary disease. On examination, he did not have any bruising over his chest. His chest was tender to palpation. Laboratory tests were significant for troponin T of 0.8 ng/mL (normal <0.01 ng/mL). Twelve-lead ECG revealed age indeterminate inferior infarct (Figure 1). Chest radiograph did not reveal any evidence of rib fractures. A preliminary diagnosis of cardiac contusion was made. Cardiac MRI was performed to evaluate for cardiac contusion. Cardiac MRI revealed no evidence of contu-sion. However, there was inferior, inferoseptal wall akinesis (Figure 2, Movie I in the online-only Data Supplement) and evidence of transmural myocardial infarction in the inferior territory (Figure 3). The patient was taken for emergent coronary angiography. Coronary angiography revealed a diffuse lesion involving the right coronary artery with TIMI 2 flow (Figure 4). Intravascular ultrasound was performed to further evaluate the lesion. Intravascular ultrasound demonstrated intramural hematoma of the right coronary artery (Figure 5, Movie II in the online-only Data Supplement). The other coronary arteries had luminal irregularities. Successful per-cutaneous coronary intervention was performed to the right coronary artery with a drug-eluting stent (Figure 6). The patient had an uneventful hospital course and is doing well on follow-up. Blunt trauma to the chest has cardiac implications. Cardiac contusion, coronary dissection, coronary artery intramural hematoma, epicardial hematoma, and commotio cordis are some disease entities that occur secondary to blunt trauma. 1 Myocardial infarction after blunt trauma can be secondary to dissection, intramural hematoma, or extrinsic compression from hematoma. Coronary intramural hematoma is a rare complication after blunt trauma, other causes being iatrogenic during percutaneous coronary intervention, spontaneous and retrograde propagation of aortic dissection. Hemorrhage in the vessel wall occurs because of the rupture of vasa vasorum and leads to hematoma formation in the medial-adventitial layers. This entity is distinguished from coronary dissection by the absence of intimal flap. Intravascular ultrasound is the mainstay modality to diagnose intramural hematomas and to differentiate from dissection. 2 The most common coronary artery to be involved in blunt trauma is the left anterior descending artery, followed by right coronary artery 3 and left circumflex artery. 3 Very few reports of coronary intramural hematomas secondary to blunt trauma have been published. 4 Our case is unique in that car...
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