CJEM Articles: hand
Displaying 1-2 of 2 results
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November
2005
7
6
Brian Steinhart
Orf is a parapoxvirus infection of sheep and goats that causes blistering lesions on the lips, nostrils, udders or toes of affected animals. Human contact can cause transmission by direct inoculation. Human orf has typically been confined to rural settings. A case is presented of an immigrant African inner-city housewife who contracted the disease after preparing a sheep's head for a meal. The lesions resolved completely after 1 month without treatment. Although relatively rare and benign, this infection is probably under-reported and over-treated in this country. This case highlights the fact that urban physicians can expect to encounter once rare or solely rural-based infections with increasing frequency.
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March
2005
7
2
Jaime T. Snarski, Robert H. Birkhahn
High-pressure injection injuries to the hand are work-related injuries that can take a devastating toll on the functionality of the affected extremity. Chemical injections are a surgical emergency. Injuries involving only water injection are rarer and have variable management strategies. We report a case of high-pressure injection hand injury due to water only. The patient was managed non-operatively with parenteral antibiotics, narcotics and elevation, with good outcome. We present a review of the literature on high-pressure injection injury.
