Photo Rounds

Recurrent drainage from an old gunshot wound

A 42-year-old man presented to the Family Medicine Clinic for evaluation of a wound on the lateral aspect of his left hand that had been producing purulent discharge for several months. A year earlier, he’d sustained a gunshot wound (GSW) to the hand, which had been treated with delayed closure and a plate spanning the remaining distal and proximal fifth metacarpal. The patient said he’d been expressing purulent material from the 1-cm nodule with central callus every other week, and thought he saw a bone "sticking up."

What’s your diagnosis?


 

Recurrent drainage from an old gunshot wound

An x-ray revealed a metal density in the area of concern that was consistent with a bullet fragment or other metallic foreign body. Since there were no lucencies on x-ray or tracking from the area of concern to the metacarpal, the diagnosis was confirmed as an infected foreign body. The history was very concerning for osteomyelitis, given that the patient had sustained a GSW and had undergone surgical repair with hardware. (Shifting hardware can also lead to callus formation and skin breakdown.)

The patient was told that he’d retained a bullet fragment or foreign body that caused a chronic infection and the recurrent drainage. In addition, the hardware spanning the gap between the remnants of his proximal and distal metacarpal had broken as a result of fatigue. He was referred to a surgeon to remove the foreign body and treat the infection. The patient was advised that he might also need replacement hardware and a bone graft.

Images and text courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD, FAAFP, Professor and Chair, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker MD School of Medicine, Kalamazoo.

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