Affiliation:
1. Departments of Neurosurgery and
2. Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Louisiana State University Health Shreveport School of Medicine, Shreveport, Louisiana
Abstract
BACKGROUND
The authors reported the first pediatric case of a craniocerebral gunshot injury successfully treated with a wound vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) device after dehiscence and infection of the initial cranial wound.
OBSERVATIONS
A 17-year-old boy suffered several gunshots to the left hemisphere, resulting in significant damage to the scalp, calvaria, and brain. Emergency hemicraniectomy was performed, with reconstruction of a complicated scalp wound performed at the initial surgery. The scalp was devitalized and ultimately dehisced, resulting in a cranial infection. It was treated first with a repeated attempt at primary closure, which failed because of persistent devitalized tissue, and was then treated with aggressive debridement followed by placement of a wound VAC device over the exposed brain as a bridge therapy to reconstruction. This procedure was deemed necessary given the active infection.
LESSONS
The patient received delayed reconstruction with a free split-thickness skin graft and made a remarkable recovery, with cranioplasty performed 6 months later. The authors reviewed the literature on wound VAC use in cranial wound treatment and proposed it as a legitimate bridge therapy to definitive reconstruction in the setting of dirty wounds, active infection, or even hemodynamically unstable patients.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
Subject
Management Science and Operations Research,Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Cited by
1 articles.
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