A Case of Transorbital Penetrating Cavernous Sinus Injury by a Bamboo Stick Treated by Craniotomy in the Hybrid Operating Room

2020 
Herein, we report a rare case of penetrating transorbital cavernous sinus injury caused by a bamboo stick, treated by craniotomy in a hybrid operating room. A 63-year-old gardener presented at our hospital with right upper orbital injury after falling on a bamboo basket. Neurological examination revealed right II, III, IV, and VI cranial nerve palsies. CT and MRI revealed a right transorbital penetrating injury by a small sharp wooden foreign body, extending from the orbit to the cavernous sinus via the superior orbital fissure. Preoperative digital subtraction angiography revealed partial occlusion of the right cavernous sinus by the foreign body and no internal carotid artery(ICA)injury. There was a nine-day waiting period after the injury because the patient was on dual antiplatelet therapy for ischemic heart disease. Subsequently, the bamboo stick was completely removed through the right fronto-temporo-orbito-zygomatic approach in a hybrid operating room. To treat the potential massive hemorrhage, a five-French balloon catheter was inserted in the right ICA at its origin via the right transfemoral approach before the craniotomy. The bamboo stick was completely removed with minor hemorrhage in the cavernous sinus; this was controlled using hemostatic materials. The postoperative course was uneventful. The patient was discharged with blindness and total ophthalmoplegia in the right eye but he was able to return to his prior job. This is the first report of such a treatment of a transorbital penetrating injury in a hybrid operating room.
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