Management of a Low-Energy Penetrating Brain Injury Caused by a Nail
Low-energy penetrating nail injury to the brain is an extremely rare neurosurgical emergency. The most common cause of nail gun injury is work related accidents; other causes result from accidental firing of a nail gun, suicide attempts by firing nail guns into the brain, and bomb blasts containing...
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2016-01-01
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Series: | Case Reports in Neurological Medicine |
Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/4371367 |
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doaj-4312aeb00c454062ba5abeffe003708a2020-11-24T23:53:21ZengHindawi LimitedCase Reports in Neurological Medicine2090-66682090-66762016-01-01201610.1155/2016/43713674371367Management of a Low-Energy Penetrating Brain Injury Caused by a NailV. R. Ferraz0G. B. Aguiar1J. L. Vitorino-Araujo2G. L. Badke3J. C. E. Veiga4Neurosurgery Residency Program, Discipline of Neurosurgery, Santa Casa de Sao Paulo School of Medical Sciences, Rua Doutor Cesário Mota Júnior 112, 01220-0202 Sao Paulo, SP, BrazilDiscipline of Neurosurgery, Santa Casa de Sao Paulo School of Medical Sciences, Rua Doutor Cesário Mota Júnior 112, 01220-0202 Sao Paulo, SP, BrazilDiscipline of Neurosurgery, Santa Casa de Sao Paulo School of Medical Sciences, Rua Doutor Cesário Mota Júnior 112, 01220-0202 Sao Paulo, SP, BrazilNeurosurgery Residency Program, Discipline of Neurosurgery, Santa Casa de Sao Paulo School of Medical Sciences, Rua Doutor Cesário Mota Júnior 112, 01220-0202 Sao Paulo, SP, BrazilDiscipline of Neurosurgery, Santa Casa de Sao Paulo School of Medical Sciences, Rua Doutor Cesário Mota Júnior 112, 01220-0202 Sao Paulo, SP, BrazilLow-energy penetrating nail injury to the brain is an extremely rare neurosurgical emergency. The most common cause of nail gun injury is work related accidents; other causes result from accidental firing of a nail gun, suicide attempts by firing nail guns into the brain, and bomb blasts containing pieces of nails. Neurosurgical treatment performed by craniotomy still seems to be the safest one; there are reports of complications such as subdural hematoma and intraparenchymal hemorrhages following the blind removal of foreign bodies leading to suggestions that all penetrating foreign bodies should be removed under direct vision. We report a rarely described neurosurgical approach for removal of a penetrating nail from the brain and skull without evidence of associated hematoma and other brain lesions.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/4371367 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
V. R. Ferraz G. B. Aguiar J. L. Vitorino-Araujo G. L. Badke J. C. E. Veiga |
spellingShingle |
V. R. Ferraz G. B. Aguiar J. L. Vitorino-Araujo G. L. Badke J. C. E. Veiga Management of a Low-Energy Penetrating Brain Injury Caused by a Nail Case Reports in Neurological Medicine |
author_facet |
V. R. Ferraz G. B. Aguiar J. L. Vitorino-Araujo G. L. Badke J. C. E. Veiga |
author_sort |
V. R. Ferraz |
title |
Management of a Low-Energy Penetrating Brain Injury Caused by a Nail |
title_short |
Management of a Low-Energy Penetrating Brain Injury Caused by a Nail |
title_full |
Management of a Low-Energy Penetrating Brain Injury Caused by a Nail |
title_fullStr |
Management of a Low-Energy Penetrating Brain Injury Caused by a Nail |
title_full_unstemmed |
Management of a Low-Energy Penetrating Brain Injury Caused by a Nail |
title_sort |
management of a low-energy penetrating brain injury caused by a nail |
publisher |
Hindawi Limited |
series |
Case Reports in Neurological Medicine |
issn |
2090-6668 2090-6676 |
publishDate |
2016-01-01 |
description |
Low-energy penetrating nail injury to the brain is an extremely rare neurosurgical emergency. The most common cause of nail gun injury is work related accidents; other causes result from accidental firing of a nail gun, suicide attempts by firing nail guns into the brain, and bomb blasts containing pieces of nails. Neurosurgical treatment performed by craniotomy still seems to be the safest one; there are reports of complications such as subdural hematoma and intraparenchymal hemorrhages following the blind removal of foreign bodies leading to suggestions that all penetrating foreign bodies should be removed under direct vision. We report a rarely described neurosurgical approach for removal of a penetrating nail from the brain and skull without evidence of associated hematoma and other brain lesions. |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/4371367 |
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