Evaluation of Patients Undergoing Removal of Glass Fragments From Injured Hands

Adult Male Adolescent Hand Injuries Wounds, Penetrating Middle Aged Foreign Bodies Lacerations 3. Good health Radiography Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Humans Female Glass Retrospective Studies
DOI: 10.1097/sap.0b013e3181f211e1 Publication Date: 2011-03-05T05:44:02Z
ABSTRACT
The hand is the body part most frequently injured by broken glass. Glass fragments lodged in soft tissues may result in numerous complications, such as infection, delayed healing, persistent pain, and late injury as a result of migration. Between 2005 and 2010, we removed 46 glass particles from the hands of 26 patients. The injuries were caused by the following: car windows broken during motor vehicle accidents in 11 patients (42%); fragments from broken glasses, dishes, or bottles in 9 (35%); the hand passing through glass in 5 (19%); and a fragment from a broken fluorescent lamp in 1 (4%) patient. Despite the efficacy of plain radiographs in detecting glass fragments, these are sometimes not obtained. Given the relatively low cost, accessibility, and efficacy of radiographs, and the adverse consequences of retained foreign bodies, the objections to obtaining radiographs should be few in diagnosing glass-related injuries of the hand.
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