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CASE REPORT
Hair thread tourniquet syndrome in a male infant: a rare surgical emergency
  1. Louise Dunphy,
  2. Yash Verma,
  3. Rossel Morhij,
  4. Michael Lamyman
  1. Department of Plastic Surgery, the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, Milton Keynes, UK
  1. Correspondence to Dr Louise Dunphy, dunphylmb{at}gmail.com

Summary

Hair thread tourniquet syndrome (HTTS) is a rare surgical emergency that occurs when one or more appendages are acutely circumferentially strangulated by human hair. If left untreated it may induce prolonged ischaemia, resulting in tissue necrosis or autoamputation of the affected digit. It may involve the fingers, toes, penis or labia. It typically occurs in infants, but cases have also been reported in adults. Prompt recognition and treatment by complete removal of the constricting agent is crucial to preserve the affected tissue. We report a case of HTTS affecting the left middle toe of an 8-week-old male infant successfully treated by surgical release of the hair. The authors aim to raise awareness of HTTS among physicians, emergency doctors, paediatricians and surgeons, as prompt recognition and management prevents adverse outcomes and tissue necrosis.

  • trauma
  • paediatrics

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Footnotes

  • Contributors All authors contributed to the writing of this case report. LD: wrote case report. YV: edited discussion. RM: literature search. ML: proofread the article and final editing.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Patient consent Parental/guardian consent obtained.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.