Miami-Dade

Medical teamwork saves teen with fishing spear through skull

 

An impressive team of trauma and neurosurgeons manages to successfully remove fishing spear from the skull of a 16-year-old accidentally shot in the head with a spear gun almost two weeks ago. The teen is out of ICU and moving into rehab.

aedgerton@miamiherald.com

As 16-year-old Yasser Lopez was in the paramedic helicopter en route to Jackson Memorial Hospital with a three-foot long fishing spear through his skull, the team at the trauma center was mobilizing to receive him.

“Time is brain,” explained Leo Harris, the physician’s assistant on Lopez’s surgery, who has been working in neurotrauma for 15 years. In cases of traumatic brain injury, according to Harris, seconds could cost brain function, and a miscalculation could be fatal.

On the afternoon of June 7, Harris got a call from Dr. George Garcia, the trauma surgeon at Jackson. The two work so closely together that they “almost know what each other is thinking,” Harris said, and they moved methodically through the critical first steps to save Lopez’s life while neurosurgeon Dr. Russ Bullock arrived at the operating room down the hall.

“He was awake and talking when I got up to the helipad,” Dr. Garcia said of the teenage patient. “But within a minute or so of getting to the hospital, he started getting agitated from fear or pain, or because the initial shock had worn off, and we had to sedate him to keep him from thrashing around.”

Earlier that day, Lopez was about to go spear fishing with his friend, when the friend accidentally discharged the spear gun he was trying to load. The fishing spear entered Lopez’s skull about an inch above his right eye and stopped just millimeters short of piercing the skin on the back of his head. He has no memory of the event, and his family has requested privacy until he makes a more complete recovery.

Dr. Garcia said that he has seen some intense injuries in his career as a trauma surgeon, but he acknowledged that this case was “pretty unique because the spear was so long.” He emphasized there was no time to get distracted by the sensational scene, and his team shifted into high gear of their “regimented” response routine.

After verifying that the patient had no additional injuries beside the obvious one, the first challenge was how to get Lopez into the donut-shaped CT scan machine with a three-foot spear protruding from his forehead. The paramedics had done an incredible job of getting the patient to the hospital without disturbing the shaft, according to Dr. Garcia, but given the lucky—and precarious—trajectory of the spear through Lopez’s brain, any movement could have proven fatal.

“Our initial thought was to cut it off with bolt cutters,” said Dr. Garcia. “But one the firefighters that brought him in said it looked like stainless steel, and we were afraid of causing more damage. So we called the Miami-Dade Tactical Rescue Team, and within minutes they were there with rebar cutters.”

As the trauma team was handling the patient’s first crucial moments of care, Dr. Bullock’s neurosurgery team was laying out a surgical plan.

“It’s always gut-wrenching to see this kind of thing because the stakes are so high,” said Dr. Bullock. “When the patient is conscious and talking but has an injury that could be lethal, the first instinct is to get this thing out of there, but if you do that then chances are high that the outcome would be bad. So we had to work out a strategy for surgery.”

He explained that the barbs in the spear that are supposed to make it stick in a fish also make it more complicated to pull out of a human brain. After consulting with the teenager’s parents, Dr. Bullock found that the tip of the spear was unscrewable. The plan that the neurosurgeon laid out had total consensus from the rest of the team, according to Harris.

Read more Miami-Dade stories from the Miami Herald

Miami Herald

Join the
Discussion

The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere on the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.

The Miami Herald uses Facebook's commenting system. You need to log in with a Facebook account in order to comment. If you have questions about commenting with your Facebook account, click here.

Have a news tip? You can send it anonymously. Click here to send us your tip - or - consider joining the Public Insight Network and become a source for The Miami Herald and el Nuevo Herald.

Hide Comments

This affects comments on all stories.

Cancel OK

  • Videos

  • Quick Job Search

Enter Keyword(s) Enter City Select a State Select a Category