Open Fracture of the Forearm Bones due to Horse Bite

Introduction: Fractures have been described mainly following falling accidents in horse-related injuries. Horse bites are uncommon accidents. We present a case of open fracture of the forearm due to horse bite. Case Report: A 35-year-old male farm-worker presented to the emergency room with alleged...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: John Ashutosh Santoshi, Leshem Lall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indian Orthopaedic Research Group 2014-01-01
Series:Journal of Orthopaedic Case Reports
Online Access:http://www.jocr.co.in/wp/2014/01/06/2250-0685-138-fulltext/
id doaj-984881835c5848458c0f55dc0fe159fb
record_format Article
spelling doaj-984881835c5848458c0f55dc0fe159fb2020-11-24T22:46:30ZengIndian Orthopaedic Research GroupJournal of Orthopaedic Case Reports2250-06852014-01-014171010.13107/jocr.2250-0685.138Open Fracture of the Forearm Bones due to Horse BiteJohn Ashutosh Santoshi0Leshem Lall1Dept. of Orthopaedic Surgery, Padhar Hospital, Padhar, Betul, MP 460005. IndiaDept. of Orthopaedic Surgery, Padhar Hospital, Padhar, Betul, MP 460005. IndiaIntroduction: Fractures have been described mainly following falling accidents in horse-related injuries. Horse bites are uncommon accidents. We present a case of open fracture of the forearm due to horse bite. Case Report: A 35-year-old male farm-worker presented to the emergency room with alleged history of horse bite to the right forearm about 2 hours prior to presentation while feeding the horse. There was deformity of the forearm with multiple puncture wounds, deep abrasions and small lacerations on the distal-third of the forearm. Copious irrigation with normal saline was done and he was administered anti-tetanus and post-exposure rabies prophylaxis. Prophylactic antibiotic therapy was commenced. Radiographs revealed fracture of radius and ulna in the mid-shaft region. He underwent emergency wound debridement, and the ulna was stabilised with an intra-medullary square nail. Seventy-two hours later, he underwent re-debridement and conversion osteosynthesis. He had an uneventful recovery and at three-month follow-up, the fractures had healed radiographically in anatomic alignment. At two-year follow-up, he is doing well, is pain free and has a normal range of motion compared to the contralateral side. Conclusion: Horse bites behave as compound fractures however rabies prophylaxis will be needed and careful observation is needed. Early radical debridement, preliminary skeletal stabilisation, re-debridement and conversion osteosynthesis to plate, and antibiotic prophylaxis were the key to the successful management of our patient. Keywords: Horse; animal bite; forearm; open fracturehttp://www.jocr.co.in/wp/2014/01/06/2250-0685-138-fulltext/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Ashutosh Santoshi
Leshem Lall
spellingShingle John Ashutosh Santoshi
Leshem Lall
Open Fracture of the Forearm Bones due to Horse Bite
Journal of Orthopaedic Case Reports
author_facet John Ashutosh Santoshi
Leshem Lall
author_sort John Ashutosh Santoshi
title Open Fracture of the Forearm Bones due to Horse Bite
title_short Open Fracture of the Forearm Bones due to Horse Bite
title_full Open Fracture of the Forearm Bones due to Horse Bite
title_fullStr Open Fracture of the Forearm Bones due to Horse Bite
title_full_unstemmed Open Fracture of the Forearm Bones due to Horse Bite
title_sort open fracture of the forearm bones due to horse bite
publisher Indian Orthopaedic Research Group
series Journal of Orthopaedic Case Reports
issn 2250-0685
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Introduction: Fractures have been described mainly following falling accidents in horse-related injuries. Horse bites are uncommon accidents. We present a case of open fracture of the forearm due to horse bite. Case Report: A 35-year-old male farm-worker presented to the emergency room with alleged history of horse bite to the right forearm about 2 hours prior to presentation while feeding the horse. There was deformity of the forearm with multiple puncture wounds, deep abrasions and small lacerations on the distal-third of the forearm. Copious irrigation with normal saline was done and he was administered anti-tetanus and post-exposure rabies prophylaxis. Prophylactic antibiotic therapy was commenced. Radiographs revealed fracture of radius and ulna in the mid-shaft region. He underwent emergency wound debridement, and the ulna was stabilised with an intra-medullary square nail. Seventy-two hours later, he underwent re-debridement and conversion osteosynthesis. He had an uneventful recovery and at three-month follow-up, the fractures had healed radiographically in anatomic alignment. At two-year follow-up, he is doing well, is pain free and has a normal range of motion compared to the contralateral side. Conclusion: Horse bites behave as compound fractures however rabies prophylaxis will be needed and careful observation is needed. Early radical debridement, preliminary skeletal stabilisation, re-debridement and conversion osteosynthesis to plate, and antibiotic prophylaxis were the key to the successful management of our patient. Keywords: Horse; animal bite; forearm; open fracture
url http://www.jocr.co.in/wp/2014/01/06/2250-0685-138-fulltext/
work_keys_str_mv AT johnashutoshsantoshi openfractureoftheforearmbonesduetohorsebite
AT leshemlall openfractureoftheforearmbonesduetohorsebite
_version_ 1725685147927314432