Surgeons Remove 1.4-Inch Marlin Bill From 31-Year-Old Man's Spinal Canal
Updated
Updated · Livescience.com · Jun 20
Surgeons Remove 1.4-Inch Marlin Bill From 31-Year-Old Man's Spinal Canal
2 articles · Updated · Livescience.com · Jun 20
Summary
A 31-year-old Louisiana sports fisherman fully recovered after surgeons removed a 1.4-inch marlin bill fragment that had entered his spinal canal through the back of his throat.
The injury happened when a roughly 60-pound white marlin jumped as he leaned over a boat to release the hook, striking him in the mouth and driving the broken tip toward the base of his skull.
An initial X-ray showed no abnormality, but worsening neck stiffness and spinal pain led doctors to order a CT scan, which revealed the fragment piercing the foramen magnum.
Surgeons extracted the tip along its entry path after making an additional incision above the top vertebra, then treated him with five antibiotics to guard against throat and marine bacteria.
He left the hospital after 8 days, took antibiotics for 2 more weeks, and the case was reported as the first known fish-bill injury to the foramen magnum.