Affiliation:
1. The Cambridge Knee Clinic, Cambridge CB249AD, UK
Abstract
Abstract
Following an uneventful arthroscopic menisectomy of the right knee, a white circular skin lesion, 1 cm in diameter, was noted on the anterior left thigh of a 23-year-old patient. The overlying paper surgical drape had not ignited nor produced smoke. Close inspection revealed a minute perforation in the drape with slight discolouration. No electro-cautery, radio-ablation or irritant skin preparation had been used during surgery. Tests failed to identify fault with the light source, fibre-optic cable or arthroscope.
The lesion was diagnosed as a full-thickness thermal burn resulting from heat transmitted from a 300-W Xenon lamp via a detached fibre-optic cable. The effects of contact between an illuminated fibre-optic light cable and living human skin are described, with changes in appearances followed over 2 years. Patients may be burnt and permanently scarred without the knowledge of staff in operating theatres if detached light cables rest against surgical drapes.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
6 articles.
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1. A Case of Skin Burns Occurring during Laparoscopic Surgery;Soonchunhyang Medical Science;2024-06-30
2. Laparoscopic light source skin burn;Journal of Surgical Case Reports;2024-03
3. Thermal Damage in Orthopaedics;Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons;2024-02-08
4. Sentinel Event Alert 68: Updated Surgical Fire Prevention for the 21st Century;The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety;2024-02
5. Preventing Light Source-Related Burns from Laparoscopy and Arthroscopy;The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety;2023-09