• Title/Summary/Keyword: Impalement

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Abdominal Impalement Injury Caused by Scaffolding Pipe following a Traffic Accident - A Case Report

  • Lee, Se Youl;Lee, Jeong Moon;Choi, Seok Jin
    • Journal of Trauma and Injury
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    • v.29 no.1
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    • pp.33-36
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    • 2016
  • Traffic accidents involving agricultural machinery have been decreasing, but mortality is still high due to a lack of safety devices such as seat belts. Furthermore, secondary damage, such as abdominal impalement injury caused by loaded materials, is more likely to occur, and this type of injury leads to a poor prognosis. Impalement with pipes is often more fatal than other penetrating injuries because the diameter of the pipe is usually larger in size than other loaded materials. We report a case of a 72-year-old man with secondary abdominal impalement injury caused by a scaffolding pipe following a traffic accident.

Unusual Bilateral Impalement Injury with Rusted Iron Bars on Face and Neck

  • Suh, Hyun Suk;Pak, Ji Hyun;Hong, Seung-Eun;Kang, So Ra
    • Archives of Craniofacial Surgery
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    • v.16 no.3
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    • pp.147-150
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    • 2015
  • Impalement injury is the subset of penetrating trauma, defined as fixed, elongated objects penetrate and remain in the human body cavity or region by relatively low velocity. We report an unusual case of facial and neck impalement where two dirty rusted iron bars penetrated forehead bilaterally and exited neck and ear respectively without causing major organ injuries. After thorough radiologic and physical evaluation, the patient got medical and surgical treatment. The patient was discharged without complication after four day of delayed wound closure. There have been no complications and sequelaes related with trauma, wound infection and scar contracture at 3-year follow-up. According to affected organs and pattern of impalement, individualized and multidisciplinary surgical approach should be considered. Following these guidelines as in this case, it was possible to achieve excellent clinical outcome in impalement injury.

Pre-Hospital and In-Hospital Management of an Abdominal Impalement Injury Caused by a Tree Branch

  • Ahn, So Ra;Lee, Joo Hyun;Kim, Keun Young;Park, Chan Yong
    • Journal of Trauma and Injury
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.288-293
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    • 2021
  • In South Korea, most patients who visit trauma centers with abdominal injuries have blunt trauma, and penetrating injuries are relatively rare. In extremely rare cases, some patients are admitted with a long object penetrating their abdomen, and these injuries are referred to as abdominal impalement injuries. Most cases of impalement injuries lead to fatal bleeding, and patients often die at the scene of the accident. However, patients who survive until reaching the hospital can have a good prognosis with optimal treatment. A 68-year-old female patient was admitted to the trauma center with a 4-cm-thick tree branch impaling her abdomen. The patient was transported by a medical helicopter and had stable vital signs at admission. The branch sticking out of the abdomen was quite long; thus, we carefully cut the branch with an electric saw to perform computed tomography (CT). CT revealed no signs of major blood vessel injury, but intestinal perforation was observed. During laparotomy, the tree branch was removed after confirming that there were no vascular injuries, and enterostomy was performed because of extensive intestinal injury. After treating other injuries, the patient was discharged without any complications except colostomy. Abdominal impalement injuries are treated using various approaches depending on the injury mechanism and injured region. However, the most important consideration is that the impaled object should not be removed during transportation and resuscitation. Instead, it should only be removed after checking for injuries to blood vessels during laparotomy in an environment where injury control is possible.

A Case of Severe Thoracoabdominal Impalement by a Steel Bar

  • Kim, Ki Tae;Seo, Pil Won
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.49 no.6
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    • pp.481-484
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    • 2016
  • A 53-year-old man arrived at the trauma center with a steel bar penetrating from the epigastrium to the right scapula. He was hypotensive and hypoxic, and immediate resuscitation and basic evaluation were performed. An emergency operation was performed due to an unstable hemodynamic state. Multiple injuries were confirmed in the right lower lobe, posterior chest wall, diaphragm, and liver lateral segment. Right lower lobectomy and liver lateral sectionectomy were performed following removal of the bar. The patient recovered without additional hemorrhage after the surgery, and was transferred to a rehabilitation institution with periodic follow-up.

Effects of Pre-tension and Additional Half-pin on Fracture Stability in Hybrid External Fixator System (강선의 인장력과 추가 Half pin이 혼성외고정장치 시스템의 안정성에 미치는 영향)

  • 김윤혁;이현근;박원만;오종건
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Precision Engineering Conference
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    • 2004.10a
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    • pp.389-392
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    • 2004
  • It is clinically well known that pre-tension of wires increases the fracture stability in ring or hybrid external fixation. In some cases, additional half pin should be necessary to increase the stability when soft tissue impalement occurs during fixation. In this paper, the fracture stability of a hybrid external fixator system with different pre-tension effects and additional half-pins was analysed using FEM to investigate the effects of these pre-tension and half pin on the system stability quantitatively. 3-D finite element models of five different fixator frames were developed using by beam elements. In axial compression analysis, the fracture stiffness was increased maximally 62% as the pre-tension increased. In torsion analysis, in the other hand, there is little variations in the fracture stiffness. Additional half pin increased the system stiffness about 200 %. From the results, proper pre-tension and additional half pin would provide good methods to increase the fracture stability of the hybrid external fixator and provide more surgical options to minimize soft tissue damage at the fracture site.

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Etchless Fabrication of Cu Circuits Using Wettability Modification and Electroless Plating (젖음성 차이와 무전해도금을 이용한 연성 구리 회로패턴 형성)

  • Park, Sang-Jin;Ko, Tae-Jun;Yoon, Juil;Moon, Myoung-Woon;Han, Jun Hyun
    • Korean Journal of Materials Research
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    • v.25 no.11
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    • pp.622-629
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    • 2015
  • Cu circuits were successfully fabricated on flexible PET(polyethylene terephthalate) substrates using wettability difference and electroless plating without an etching process. The wettability of Cu plating solution on PET was controlled by oxygen plasma treatment and $SiO_x$-DLC(silicon oxide containing diamond like carbon) coating by HMDSO(hexamethyldisiloxane) plasma. With an increase of the height of the nanostructures on the PET surface with the oxygen plasma treatment time, the wettability difference between the hydrophilicity and hydrophobicity increased, which allowed the etchless formation of a Cu pattern with high peel strength by selective Cu plating. When the height of the nanostructure was more than 1400 nm (60 min oxygen plasma treatment), the reduction of the critical impalement pressure with the decreasing density of the nanostructure caused the precipitation of copper in the hydrophobic region.