A Rare Case of Retained Sabot After Close-Range Shotgun Injury

A Rare Case of Retained Sabot After Close-Range Shotgun Injury

Flippin et al. surg case rep (2021) 7:148 https://doi.org/10.1186/s40792-021-01238-z CASE REPORT Open Access A rare case of retained sabot after close-range shotgun injury J. Alford Flippin1,2* , Sami Kishawi1,2, Hannah Braunstein2 and Alaina M. Lasinski1,2 Abstract Background: Shotgun injuries are a relatively uncommon type of trauma, and therefore may present a challenge in management for trauma surgeons. This is particularly true in the case of surgeons unfamiliar with the unique charac- teristics of shotgun wounds and the mechanics of shotguns. In many cases, the shot pellets are the primary source of injury. However, a broad understanding of shotgun mechanics is important in recognizing alternative presentations. This article details a case of sabot (a stabilization device used with certain projectiles) retention after a close-range shotgun injury, reviews underlying shotgun mechanics, and discusses strategies for the detection and mitigation of these injuries. The aim of this case report is to increase awareness of and reduce the potential morbidity of close- range shotgun injuries. Case presentation: A middle-aged female presented to the Emergency Department with wounds to her right hip and fank after sufering a shotgun injury. A contrast computed tomography scan demonstrated no evidence of hollow viscous or vascular injury, but was otherwise severely limited by scatter artifact from the numerous embed- ded pellets. The patient was admitted for wound care and discharged 2 days later with a clean wound bed and no evidence of tissue necrosis. Six days after injury, she reported an “unusual” smell associated with severe pain in her right hip wound. She was evaluated in clinic where examination revealed a retained foreign body, identifed to be a shotgun shell sabot, which was removed in clinic. She presented again several days before scheduled follow-up with a persistent foul smell from her wound and was noted to have necrotic tissue at the base and margins of the wound that required hospital readmission for operative debridement and closure with negative pressure wound therapy. The patient had an uncomplicated recovery after surgical debridement. Conclusions: Although shotgun sabot penetration and retention are rare, they are associated with signifcant mor- bidity. Sabot penetration should be considered if injury narrative, physical examination, or radiographic characteristics indicate a distance from shotgun to patient of less than 2 m. A high degree of suspicion is indicated at less than 1 m. Keywords: Shotgun, Sabot, Wadding, Retained foreign object, Case report Background may be unfamiliar with shotgun mechanics and the Injury by shotgun is a relatively uncommon form of unique characteristics of shotgun-induced wounds, espe- trauma despite the large number of these weapons world- cially those sustained at close range, and the potential wide and the less restrictive environment surrounding pitfalls of their management. their ownership [1]. For this reason, trauma surgeons Shotgun shells are composed of a brass base which holds propellant gunpowder bonded to a hard-plastic shell case called a hull. Tis hull contains a softer plas- *Correspondence: [email protected] tic “wad” which is solid at its breech end and hollow at 1 Department of Surgery, Division of Trauma, Critical Care, Burns, and Acute Care Surgery, MetroHealth Medical Center, 2500 MetroHealth its barrel end to contain the pellets (collectively, “shot”) Drive, Cleveland, OH 44109-1998, USA characteristic of shotguns (Fig. 1) [2]. Tis wadding is a Full list of author information is available at the end of the article form of ballistic sabot, a structural device which keeps a © The Author(s) 2021. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://crea- tivecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. Flippin et al. surg case rep (2021) 7:148 Page 2 of 4 Fig. 1 A cut-away diagram demonstrating the components of a shotgun shell. A brass base (yellow) and hard plastic hull (red) compose the exterior. Inside the base are the primer and gunpowder. Inside the hull are the shot pellets, themselves contained in the sabot (white), the breech end of which is called a wad Fig. 2 Image of the patient’s wound on the day of injury projectile (or projectiles, in the case of shotgun pellets) with a signifcantly smaller diameter than the barrel cen- tered therein. Upon exiting the barrel, the sabot fractures observed that none had entered the peritoneal cavity and under the pressure diferential and releases the shot con- there was no contrast extravasation from the rectum or tained within it into a characteristic cone. Te efective other evidence of hollow viscus or vascular injury. Due range is rarely more than 35 to 45 m unless loaded with to the large area of tissue destruction from the shotgun non-pellet ammunition. Once the sabot exits the barrel injury and the radiolucent nature of the plastic shotgun and no longer contains shot, it has a large surface area- sabot, it was not apparent on CT that a foreign body was to-mass ratio and rarely travels more than 2 m beyond present other than the shotgun pellets. As discussed fur- the end of the barrel [3]. ther in the next section, this large pocket of destroyed tis- In this article, we will discuss the unique characteristics sue, now flled with air, serves as both a clue that a sabot of shotgun wounds; present an interesting case of a close- may be present and a confounder because that sabot is range shotgun injury; and, novel to the literature, discuss radiolucent. methods to detect and mitigate complications related to Te patient was admitted for wound care and physical these injuries. Te aim of this case report is to increase therapy given the severely limited range of motion in her awareness of and reduce the potential morbidity of close- right lower extremity. Te patient’s wound care regimen range shotgun injuries. included an initial washout with betadine and saline fol- lowing which it was packed with a gauze roll and cov- Case presentation ered with gauze. Tis dressing was to be changed daily. Given the number of pellets and their dispersal in the A middle-aged female patient was brought to our hospi- soft tissues, it would not have been practical to remove tal as a category 1 (the most critical level) trauma acti- them without signifcant tissue disruption. Over the vation after being struck in the right hip and fank by a next 2 days, her wound was packed with saline wet-to- shotgun discharge during an episode of interpersonal dry dressings daily and appeared healthy. She showed violence. Upon arrival, she was found to have a hemo- progress with mobility such that she was cleared for dis- static 8-cm 5-cm irregular wound to the right fank and × charge 2 days after her injury. hip tracking medially and deep, with exposure of muscle Six days post-injury, she requested to be seen in clinic (Fig. 2). Primary and secondary surveys revealed no other after noting an “unusual” smell and developing severe traumatic injuries and she was hemodynamically normal. pain at the site of the injury. Upon examination, a for- Her workup included a computed tomography (CT) eign body was observed embedded deep in the medial scan of her abdomen and pelvis with intravenous (IV) margin of the wound, with the shallowest edge 2–3 cm and rectal contrast to evaluate for peritoneal violation below the surface of the wound and the odor of gunpow- and hollow viscus injury. While the imaging was seri- der was recognized. It was only at this time that the dis- ously limited by the scatter artifact of several hundred tance to the weapon upon discharge, less than one meter, shotgun pellets tightly grouped into a small area, it was Flippin et al. surg case rep (2021) 7:148 Page 3 of 4 was elicited specifcally from the patient. With minor cases have been reported in which the injury happened at difculty, the object was mobilized and removed in the close range and the sabot was also ejected into the patient clinic. It was immediately recognized as a shotgun shell [4]. In one case, the sabot was ejected into the chest cav- sabot (Fig. 3) and turned over to Pathology for forward- ity causing delayed pulmonary cavitation and massive ing to law enforcement per our foreign body protocol. hemoptysis [5]. In another, the sabot penetrated the gas- At this time, she was noted to have some areas of threat- tric lumen causing delayed refux of the sabot into the ened skin and subcutaneous tissue, but nothing requiring esophagus and subsequent esophageal perforation [6]. immediate debridement. She was instructed to continue Similar to other projectiles, the pellets themselves are daily wet-to-dry dressing changes and was scheduled for not a signifcant risk factor for wound infection, so it is close follow-up. our practice not to routinely remove them unless there She returned several days later, prior to scheduled fol- is another specifc indication for removal such as a for- low-up, with renewed concerns about her wound.

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