Radiology Case Reports (Jun 2024)

Retained wooden splinter migrated within a digital flexor tendon sheath: Ultrasonographic diagnosis for presurgical planning

  • Aliya G. Feroe, MD, MPH,
  • Nicholas A. Pulos, MD,
  • Jane Konidis, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 6
pp. 2121 – 2124

Abstract

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A 29-year-old right-handed woman presented to an outside emergency department with right small finger pain, swelling, and concern for a retained wooden splinter. Diagnosis and treatment were delayed for 2 weeks due to the inability to identify the foreign body clinically or radiographically. Ultimately, ultrasonography by a fellowship-trained specialist was used to localize the wooden splinter. It was embedded within the flexor tendon sheath but had migrated away from its initial point of entry. The patient underwent subsequent surgical extraction, irrigation, and debridement. Two weeks following surgery, she had regained full range of motion through her digit without signs of infection. This case highlights the use of diagnostic ultrasound to identify a radiolucent foreign body, such as a wooden splinter, and to guide subsequent surgical extraction.

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