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Description
A 31-year-old man presented to the accident and emergency department with a penetrating injury to his left posterolateral chest wall. He was haemodynamically stable, and there was no significant bleeding from the entry point. Plain anterior radiography (figure 1) of the chest revealed a knife embedded within the extrathoracic tissues extending through the scapula, posterior to the clavicle with the tip lying in the left anterior triangle of the neck.
A CT angiogram with three-dimensional reconstruction was performed, given the proximity to important neurovascular structures. This revealed the anterior edge of the knife was related posteriorly to the subclavian vessels and the tip was entering the carotid sheath. None of the important neurovascular structures appeared to be injured (figures 2 and 3).
Operative exploration was performed with the aim of removing the knife safely. The tip of the knife was identified with no discernible injury to the contents of the carotid sheath. The inferior aspect of the incision was extended laterally to expose the body of the knife and the subclavian vessels. Further access was required, therefore a clavicular osteotomy was performed. The knife was found to abut the posterior wall of the subclavian artery but had not penetrated it. The knife was carefully slid backwards and removed from the posterior chest wound. The clavicle was plated and the neck wound was closed. The chest wound was left open to allow drainage.
He was discharged home on day 4. At follow-up, he was asymptomatic and there were no postoperative complications.
Learning points
Penetrating neck injuries account for 5%–10% of all trauma cases presenting to the emergency department with a mortality rate of 3%–6%.1
Using anatomical landmarks, the neck is divided into three zones:
Zone 1: Horizontal area between the clavicle/suprasternal notch and the cricoid cartilage encompassing the thoracic outlet structures.
Zone 2: Area between the cricoid cartilage and the angle of the mandible.
Zone 3: Area that lies between the angle of the mandible and the base of the skull.
Some authors advocate conservative management for stable patients with injuries in any of the zones.2 3 Our patient was stable and had a zone 1 injury; therefore, conservative management would have been ideal. Unfortunately, the knife was embedded which necessitated removal. A form of imaging which could delineate vital structures in this area was therefore useful to guide operative exploration.
Footnotes
Contributors UI was responsible for writing the article and was involved in the management of the patient. RS edited, gained consent and prepared for publication. NR reported the films and reconstructed the CT. DK was the surgeon involved during the operation.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Obtained.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.