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Splinter

A splinter (also known as a sliver) is a fragment of a larger object, or a foreign body that penetrates or is purposely injected into a body. The foreign body must be lodged inside tissue to be considered a splinter. Splinters may cause initial pain through ripping of flesh and muscle, or infection through bacteria on the foreign object.[1]

Splinter
Other namesSliver
Wooden splinter in a finger
ComplicationsInfection
TypesWood, glass, plastic, metal, and spines of animals
Risk factorsInfection
Diagnostic methodUltrasonography

Splinters commonly consist of wood, but there are many other types, for example, other common types of splinters are glass, plastic, metal, and spines of animals.[2]

As with any wound that breaks the skin, splinters can lead to infection, which if left untreated could develop into more serious complications. If a splinter is in the body for more than 2–3 days, or if the wound shows signs of inflammation or tenderness (whether the splinter was removed or not), advice should be sought from a doctor.

Getting a splinter

Generally, a splinter causes an initial feeling of pain as the sharp object makes its initial penetration through the body. Through this penetration, the object cuts through the cutaneous layer of the skin, and settles in the subcutaneous layer of the skin, and can even penetrate further down, breaking the sub-cutaneous layer, settling in muscle tissue, or even the bone. Some splinters will remain in place, but most will continue to migrate through the body, further damaging their surroundings.

Types

 
Sea urchins may cause splinters

According to the American Academy of Family Physicians, the most common foreign bodies contracted by people fall into two official classes: biological splinters, and nonbiological splinters.[3] In the biological class, splinters include bone, fish spines, teeth, and wood. In the nonbiological class, common splinters contracted are glass, metal, aluminum, fishhooks, pencil graphite, and plastic.

Rarely, people may become infected with splinters from more unusual sources. Common cases of exotic foreign bodies include sea urchins, insect stings, stingray spines, and even grenade shrapnel.

Specific details of some splinters

  • Wood: this type of splinter is contracted from lumber or other vegetative materials. Wood splinters must be removed from wounds because they are associated with inflammation and risk of infection. Larger or deeper splinters can result in difficult removal, or localization of the foreign body.
  • Fishhooks: fishhooks that become lodged in the skin are problematic because of the barbs found on the ends of most fishhooks. These barbs are designed to make removal difficult, and if care is not taken, the victim can experience tearing of not only the flesh, but the muscle as well. The most common injuries caused by fishhooks occur in the hand, face, scalp, foot, and eye.
  • Glass: One study found that patients were more likely to feel sensations from glass present in their skin than from any other kind of splinter. Though glass is generally detectable by radiography and is radiopaque, there is limited ability for radiography to detect glass fragments smaller than 2mm. Most glass splinters are inert, and generally lack the ability to migrate to other regions of the body.[4]
  • Other: Pencil lead and other graphite foreign bodies, once lodged in the cutaneous layer of the skin, can cause permanent pigment tattooing if not removed immediately. Metallic bodies range from BB pellets to grenade shrapnel. Smaller objects can be removed without much difficulty if the depth of the wound remains superficial, but if the wound does not protrude past the subcutaneous layers of the skin, and remains inert, the object can actually remain in place. In larger objects, fragments that remain superficial in one's body may be removed without much trouble, but if wounds protrude past the subcutaneous layers of the skin and even into the muscular area or near vital organs, such objects must be left alone and immediate medical attention must be sought.
  • Hair: Short lengths of hair, especially stiff hair such as trimmed beard hair or pet hair, can work its way under the skin of the feet or hands. So-called hair splinters are commonly experienced by hairdressers and dog groomers.[5] This is distinct from an ingrown hair, where a hair still attached to its follicle grows back under (or fails to emerge from) the skin. Furthermore, unlike an ingrown hair, the hair that is embedded by a hair splinter may not be one's own; the hair may have either belonged to another person or to an animal.

Detection

 
Anatomy The Skin - NCI Visuals Online

Splinters are often first detected by the person with the splinter in their body. There are many signs that a splinter has entered one's body.

Signs of a hidden foreign body

  • Puncture wound
  • Blood-stained injury track of a fresh wound
  • Sharp pain with deep palpation over a puncture wound
  • Discoloration beneath the epidermis
  • Wound that elicits pain with movement
  • Wound that fails to heal
  • Abscess (with sterile culture)
  • Pain associated with a mass
  • Mass under the epidermis
  • Chronically draining purulent wound
  • Cyst
  • Granuloma formation
  • Sterile monoarticular arthritis
  • Periosteal reactions
  • Osteomyelitis
  • Pseudotumors of bone
  • Delayed tendon or nerve injury

Imaging

 
Ultrasonography of a subcutaneous splinter (in a finger) 4 x 1mm with oblique stroke.

If manual detection and localization fail, the main methods for medical imaging of splinters are:

  • Projectional radiography – used to locate bone, fish spines, glass, gravel-stone, metal, aluminum, pencil graphite, some plastics, teeth, and some wood (e.g., spines, cactus, thorns)
  • Medical ultrasonography – used to locate glass, metal, pencil graphite, some plastics, stone, and some types of wood.[6]

Small wooden splinters (1–4 mm) distant from bones are most easily detected by ultrasonography, while CT scan and magnetic resonance imaging have higher sensitivity for those near bones.[7]

Removal

There are many medical techniques to remove splinters safely.[8] Common medical techniques include the Elliptical Technique and the String Technique.[9] In the elliptical technique the surrounding area of the splinter is sliced in an elliptical formation. From there the flesh in the elliptical area is cut (in the shape of an upside-down cone) and the whole chunk of flesh containing the splinter is removed. The Needle Cover Technique is limited to fishhook removal. A string is looped around the base of the hook, and as the hook is pressed further into the skin, the string is pulled, allowing the barbs to be unhooked from muscle and follow the path of the rest of the hook out of the body without snagging any additional flesh.[9][10]

Since the splinter has penetrated through a physical barrier of the body it allows for an individual to get an infection.[11] The opening from the splinter will make it easier for bacteria to get into the body. It is strongly encouraged for the removal of a splinter before falling victim to an infection.

Infection

Infection is usually determined by the duration of time that the foreign object remains lodged in the human body. Objects that have included poison, deep penetration, dirt, or bite injuries generally result in a shorter time until infection is notable. According to the AAFP, patients that are older, or have diabetes, or have wounds that are longer, wider, more jagged or deeper, have a much higher risk of infection. Simply the easiest way to avoid infection is to completely remove the splinters or foreign body as soon as possible. Though infection is generally the largest complication encountered with splinters, ranging from 1.1 to 12 percent presence, the use of antibiotics in non-bite cases is generally deemed unnecessary by the medical community.[12] Though cases are rare, infection of foreign body wounds can result in cases of tetanus. [13]

One case of tetanus contraction through a splinter was seen in Ohio in 1993. An 80-year-old woman was presented to an ED with dysphagia and a stiff jaw. Not long after a preliminary checkup, a wood splinter was found to have been lodged in her chin for approximately 1 week; the area was erythematous with active purulent drainage. The woman was diagnosed with tetanus, admitted to the hospital, and begun on a regimen of 3,000 units of tetanus immune globulin, tetanus toxoid, and intravenous clindamycin. Despite aggressive treatment, including assisted mechanical ventilation, the patient died 15 days later from the effects of her primary infection. The woman had no history of previous tetanus vaccinations despite previous care for a wound and ongoing medical attention for hypertension.[14]

Since most splinters are made of organic matter, they are much more dangerous than other types of things puncturing the body. Splinters are usually infected with many bacteria which then turn into an infection such as tetanus. Due to a splinter being made of organic matter, it makes it much more difficult for the body to get rid of it.[15]

References

  1. ^ "default - Stanford Children's Health". www.stanfordchildrens.org. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  2. ^ Capellan O., Hollander, J.E. (2003). Management of lacerations in the emergency department. Emerg. Med. Clin. North. Am. 21, 205–31.
  3. ^ American College of Emergency Physicians: clinical policy for the initial approach to patients presenting with penetrating extremity trauma. Ann Emerg Med. 1999;33:612–36.
  4. ^ "What happens if you don't remove a splinter?". www.abc.net.au. 2017-06-28. Retrieved 2020-06-26.
  5. ^ healthline.com
  6. ^ Tibbles CD, Porcaro W. "Procedural applications of ultrasound." Emerg Med Clin North Am. 2004; 22: 797–815.
  7. ^ Mizel, Mark S.; Steinmetz, Neil D.; Trepman, Elly (1994). "Detection of Wooden Foreign Bodies in Muscle Tissue: Experimental Comparison of Computed Tomography, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, and Ultrasonography". Foot & Ankle International. 15 (8): 437–443. doi:10.1177/107110079401500807. ISSN 1071-1007. PMID 7981816. S2CID 24868606.
  8. ^ "Splinter removal: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia". medlineplus.gov. Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  9. ^ a b Blankstein A, Cohen I, Heiman Z, Salai M, Diamant L, Heim M, et al. Ultrasonography as a diagnostic modality and therapeutic adjuvant in the management of soft tissue foreign bodies in the lower extremities. Isr Med Assoc J. 2001;3:411–3.
  10. ^ "How to remove a splinter". www.aad.org. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  11. ^ "What Happens if You Don't Take Out a Splinter?". Live Science. 15 June 2019.
  12. ^ Broder KR, Cortese MM, Iskander JK, Kretsinger K, Slade BA, Brown KH, et al., for the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). Preventing tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis among adolescents: use of tetanus toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid and acellular pertussis vaccines recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). MMWR Recomm Rep. 2006;55RR-31–34.
  13. ^ Rupert, Jedda; Honeycutt, James David; Odom, Michael Ryan (2020-06-15). "Foreign Bodies in the Skin: Evaluation and Management". American Family Physician. 101 (12): 740–747. ISSN 0002-838X. PMID 32538598.
  14. ^ Buttaravoli PM, Stair TO. Minor emergencies: splinters to fractures. St. Louis: Mosby, 2000;471–7.
  15. ^ "Here's What Happens if You Don't Remove a Splinter".

splinter, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scho. For other uses see Splinter disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Splinter news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message A splinter also known as a sliver is a fragment of a larger object or a foreign body that penetrates or is purposely injected into a body The foreign body must be lodged inside tissue to be considered a splinter Splinters may cause initial pain through ripping of flesh and muscle or infection through bacteria on the foreign object 1 SplinterOther namesSliverWooden splinter in a fingerComplicationsInfectionTypesWood glass plastic metal and spines of animalsRisk factorsInfectionDiagnostic methodUltrasonographySplinters commonly consist of wood but there are many other types for example other common types of splinters are glass plastic metal and spines of animals 2 As with any wound that breaks the skin splinters can lead to infection which if left untreated could develop into more serious complications If a splinter is in the body for more than 2 3 days or if the wound shows signs of inflammation or tenderness whether the splinter was removed or not advice should be sought from a doctor Contents 1 Getting a splinter 2 Types 3 Specific details of some splinters 4 Detection 4 1 Signs of a hidden foreign body 4 2 Imaging 5 Removal 6 Infection 7 ReferencesGetting a splinter EditGenerally a splinter causes an initial feeling of pain as the sharp object makes its initial penetration through the body Through this penetration the object cuts through the cutaneous layer of the skin and settles in the subcutaneous layer of the skin and can even penetrate further down breaking the sub cutaneous layer settling in muscle tissue or even the bone Some splinters will remain in place but most will continue to migrate through the body further damaging their surroundings Types Edit Sea urchins may cause splinters According to the American Academy of Family Physicians the most common foreign bodies contracted by people fall into two official classes biological splinters and nonbiological splinters 3 In the biological class splinters include bone fish spines teeth and wood In the nonbiological class common splinters contracted are glass metal aluminum fishhooks pencil graphite and plastic Rarely people may become infected with splinters from more unusual sources Common cases of exotic foreign bodies include sea urchins insect stings stingray spines and even grenade shrapnel Specific details of some splinters EditWood this type of splinter is contracted from lumber or other vegetative materials Wood splinters must be removed from wounds because they are associated with inflammation and risk of infection Larger or deeper splinters can result in difficult removal or localization of the foreign body Fishhooks fishhooks that become lodged in the skin are problematic because of the barbs found on the ends of most fishhooks These barbs are designed to make removal difficult and if care is not taken the victim can experience tearing of not only the flesh but the muscle as well The most common injuries caused by fishhooks occur in the hand face scalp foot and eye Glass One study found that patients were more likely to feel sensations from glass present in their skin than from any other kind of splinter Though glass is generally detectable by radiography and is radiopaque there is limited ability for radiography to detect glass fragments smaller than 2mm Most glass splinters are inert and generally lack the ability to migrate to other regions of the body 4 Other Pencil lead and other graphite foreign bodies once lodged in the cutaneous layer of the skin can cause permanent pigment tattooing if not removed immediately Metallic bodies range from BB pellets to grenade shrapnel Smaller objects can be removed without much difficulty if the depth of the wound remains superficial but if the wound does not protrude past the subcutaneous layers of the skin and remains inert the object can actually remain in place In larger objects fragments that remain superficial in one s body may be removed without much trouble but if wounds protrude past the subcutaneous layers of the skin and even into the muscular area or near vital organs such objects must be left alone and immediate medical attention must be sought Hair Short lengths of hair especially stiff hair such as trimmed beard hair or pet hair can work its way under the skin of the feet or hands So called hair splinters are commonly experienced by hairdressers and dog groomers 5 This is distinct from an ingrown hair where a hair still attached to its follicle grows back under or fails to emerge from the skin Furthermore unlike an ingrown hair the hair that is embedded by a hair splinter may not be one s own the hair may have either belonged to another person or to an animal Detection Edit Anatomy The Skin NCI Visuals Online Splinters are often first detected by the person with the splinter in their body There are many signs that a splinter has entered one s body Signs of a hidden foreign body Edit Puncture wound Blood stained injury track of a fresh wound Sharp pain with deep palpation over a puncture wound Discoloration beneath the epidermis Wound that elicits pain with movement Wound that fails to heal Abscess with sterile culture Pain associated with a mass Mass under the epidermis Chronically draining purulent wound Cyst Granuloma formation Sterile monoarticular arthritis Periosteal reactions Osteomyelitis Pseudotumors of bone Delayed tendon or nerve injuryImaging Edit Ultrasonography of a subcutaneous splinter in a finger 4 x 1mm with oblique stroke If manual detection and localization fail the main methods for medical imaging of splinters are Projectional radiography used to locate bone fish spines glass gravel stone metal aluminum pencil graphite some plastics teeth and some wood e g spines cactus thorns Medical ultrasonography used to locate glass metal pencil graphite some plastics stone and some types of wood 6 Small wooden splinters 1 4 mm distant from bones are most easily detected by ultrasonography while CT scan and magnetic resonance imaging have higher sensitivity for those near bones 7 Removal EditThere are many medical techniques to remove splinters safely 8 Common medical techniques include the Elliptical Technique and the String Technique 9 In the elliptical technique the surrounding area of the splinter is sliced in an elliptical formation From there the flesh in the elliptical area is cut in the shape of an upside down cone and the whole chunk of flesh containing the splinter is removed The Needle Cover Technique is limited to fishhook removal A string is looped around the base of the hook and as the hook is pressed further into the skin the string is pulled allowing the barbs to be unhooked from muscle and follow the path of the rest of the hook out of the body without snagging any additional flesh 9 10 Since the splinter has penetrated through a physical barrier of the body it allows for an individual to get an infection 11 The opening from the splinter will make it easier for bacteria to get into the body It is strongly encouraged for the removal of a splinter before falling victim to an infection Infection EditInfection is usually determined by the duration of time that the foreign object remains lodged in the human body Objects that have included poison deep penetration dirt or bite injuries generally result in a shorter time until infection is notable According to the AAFP patients that are older or have diabetes or have wounds that are longer wider more jagged or deeper have a much higher risk of infection Simply the easiest way to avoid infection is to completely remove the splinters or foreign body as soon as possible Though infection is generally the largest complication encountered with splinters ranging from 1 1 to 12 percent presence the use of antibiotics in non bite cases is generally deemed unnecessary by the medical community 12 Though cases are rare infection of foreign body wounds can result in cases of tetanus 13 One case of tetanus contraction through a splinter was seen in Ohio in 1993 An 80 year old woman was presented to an ED with dysphagia and a stiff jaw Not long after a preliminary checkup a wood splinter was found to have been lodged in her chin for approximately 1 week the area was erythematous with active purulent drainage The woman was diagnosed with tetanus admitted to the hospital and begun on a regimen of 3 000 units of tetanus immune globulin tetanus toxoid and intravenous clindamycin Despite aggressive treatment including assisted mechanical ventilation the patient died 15 days later from the effects of her primary infection The woman had no history of previous tetanus vaccinations despite previous care for a wound and ongoing medical attention for hypertension 14 Since most splinters are made of organic matter they are much more dangerous than other types of things puncturing the body Splinters are usually infected with many bacteria which then turn into an infection such as tetanus Due to a splinter being made of organic matter it makes it much more difficult for the body to get rid of it 15 References Edit default Stanford Children s Health www stanfordchildrens org Retrieved 2022 03 21 Capellan O Hollander J E 2003 Management of lacerations in the emergency department Emerg Med Clin North Am 21 205 31 American College of Emergency Physicians clinical policy for the initial approach to patients presenting with penetrating extremity trauma Ann Emerg Med 1999 33 612 36 What happens if you don t remove a splinter www abc net au 2017 06 28 Retrieved 2020 06 26 healthline com Tibbles CD Porcaro W Procedural applications of ultrasound Emerg Med Clin North Am 2004 22 797 815 Mizel Mark S Steinmetz Neil D Trepman Elly 1994 Detection of Wooden Foreign Bodies in Muscle Tissue Experimental Comparison of Computed Tomography Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Ultrasonography Foot amp Ankle International 15 8 437 443 doi 10 1177 107110079401500807 ISSN 1071 1007 PMID 7981816 S2CID 24868606 Splinter removal MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia medlineplus gov Retrieved 2021 10 27 a b Blankstein A Cohen I Heiman Z Salai M Diamant L Heim M et al Ultrasonography as a diagnostic modality and therapeutic adjuvant in the management of soft tissue foreign bodies in the lower extremities Isr Med Assoc J 2001 3 411 3 How to remove a splinter www aad org Retrieved 2022 03 21 What Happens if You Don t Take Out a Splinter Live Science 15 June 2019 Broder KR Cortese MM Iskander JK Kretsinger K Slade BA Brown KH et al for the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices ACIP Preventing tetanus diphtheria and pertussis among adolescents use of tetanus toxoid reduced diphtheria toxoid and acellular pertussis vaccines recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices ACIP MMWR Recomm Rep 2006 55RR 31 34 Rupert Jedda Honeycutt James David Odom Michael Ryan 2020 06 15 Foreign Bodies in the Skin Evaluation and Management American Family Physician 101 12 740 747 ISSN 0002 838X PMID 32538598 Buttaravoli PM Stair TO Minor emergencies splinters to fractures St Louis Mosby 2000 471 7 Here s What Happens if You Don t Remove a Splinter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Splinter amp oldid 1127598225, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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