Residual foreign body in the neck after trauma results in the delayed rupture of the common carotid and internal jugular vein: a case report

  • Luo Y
  • Yuan H
  • Cao Z
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Abstract

UNLABELLED: INTRODUCTION: Trauma and foreign body residue occurring in different settings are common in the neck. Some small injuries go unrecognized, and vascular injuries caused by the sharp penetrating trauma of a foreign body are very dangerous. Without early diagnosis and treatment, foreign body residue remains a major cause of mortality.CASE PRESENTATION: A six-cm piece of wooden chopstick was not initially detected in the neck of a 24-year-old Chinese man presenting with a slight bleeding wound after a brawl accident. Three days later, the patient had an expanding neck hematoma and shortness of breath. Computed tomography revealed a dense shadow in the soft tissue of the left side of the patient's neck, and surgical exploration found that a residual broken chopstick had resulted in a delayed rupture of the common carotid artery and internal jugular vein.CONCLUSION: A residual foreign body should be seriously considered after neck trauma because it can result in a lethal hemorrhage originating from a delayed rupture of blood vessels.

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Luo, Y., Yuan, H., & Cao, Z. S. (2013). Residual foreign body in the neck after trauma results in the delayed rupture of the common carotid and internal jugular vein: a case report. Journal of Medical Case Reports, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-7-13

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