Journal of Medical Case Reports (May 2009)

Lamellar corneal injury by bamboo splinters: a case report

  • Kawashima Motoko,
  • Kawakita Tetsuya,
  • Shigeyasu Chika,
  • Shimazaki Jun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-3-7226
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
p. 7226

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction We report an unusual case of corneal lamellar injury caused by long bamboo splinters. Case presentation A 70-year-old Japanese man visited our hospital with a bamboo injury. Slit lamp examination revealed that a bundle of bamboo splinters had deeply penetrated the corneal stroma of the right eye from the nasal limbus. The splinters were approximately 8 mm in length, but had not perforated the anterior chamber. They were completely removed by superficial corneal incision alongside each splinter with no consequences. The eye has remained healed for 3 months postoperatively. Conclusion The bamboo splinters did not perforate the anterior chamber, although they were long and hard enough to do so. This may be because the spatula-like shape and flexibility of the bamboo splinters allowed them to penetrate the lamellar layer of the corneal stroma with ease, but with no perforation of deeper tissue.