4.4 Article

Management of migrating intracranial bullet fragments in a 13-year-old female after firearm brain injury: technical and surgical nuances

Journal

BRAIN INJURY
Volume 36, Issue 3, Pages 432-439

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02699052.2022.2034185

Keywords

Firearm injury; migrating bullet fragments; pediatric neurosurgery; penetrating brain injury; traumatic brain injury

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This article presents the challenges and nuances of managing multiple migrating intracranial fragments after a pediatric gunshot wound to the head. The case report describes a successful retrieval of fragments using adjustments in head of bed elevation and gravity assistance. The patient recovered well after the surgery.
Introduction We present the challenges and nuances of management in a rare case of multiple migrating intracranial fragments after pediatric gunshot wound to the head (GSWH). Case Presentation A 13-year-old girl suffered left parietal GSWH, with new neurologic decline 3 days after initial debridement. Serial imaging showed the largest intracranial fragments had migrated into the left trigone, and descended further with head of bed (HOB) elevation. HOB was iteratively decreased, with concurrent intracranial pressure monitoring. After extubation, with an alert and stable neurologic exam, HOB was decreased to -15 degrees, allowing gravity-assisted migration of the fragments to an anatomically favorable position within the left occipital horn. The patient underwent occipital craniotomy for fragment retrieval on hospital day 27. Two large and >20 smaller fragments were retrieved using neuronavigation and intraoperative ultrasound. Forensics showed these to be .45 caliber handgun bullet fragments. The patient recovered well after 2-months of intensive inpatient rehabilitation. Discussion During new neurologic decline after GSWH, bullet migration must be considered and serial cranial imaging is requisite. Surgical retrieval of deep fragments requires judicious planning to minimize further injury. Tightly controlled HOB adjustments with gravity assistance for repositioning of fragments may have utility in optimizing anatomic favorability prior to surgery.

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