A healthy 24-year-old landscaper was using a sledgehammer and steel wedge to split rock. After a strike of the hammer, he felt pain in his abdomen and noticed a small laceration to the epigastric region. He also recognized an incongruity in the sledgehammer head.
En route to the emergency department, the patient had one instance of nonbloody emesis. He presented with normal vital signs but developed epigastric pain and suffered multiple episodes of hematemesis. On exam he had a 7-mm laceration of the right anterior abdominal wall and signs of peritonitis. Both a radiograph (Figure 1) and computed tomography (CT) scan (Figure 2) of the abdomen were obtained.
The patient received tranexamic acid, ondansetron, and antibiotics. General surgery performed an urgent laparotomy, during which one litre of blood was evacuated from the peritoneal cavity, and an anterior stomach wall defect was repaired. No foreign body was found. The patient was discharged home in stable condition 4 days later.
Penetrating trauma from sledgehammer use has been reported and can be fatal.Reference Smith and Zumwalt 1 - Reference Turkcuoglu and Aydogan 3 The resulting fragments are estimated to reach velocities of 110 metres per second,Reference McIntire and Manning 4 which is on the same order of magnitude as a bullet and can present similarly to a gunshot wound. The physical examination of the wound can be unimpressive. A key in management is recognizing that a penetrating foreign body may cause significant organ injury, even if the patient appears initially stable.
Competing interests
None declared.