Abstract
Transorbital penetrating pontine injuries from small spear-like objects, which are extremely rare, provide neurosurgeons with life-threatening and challenging conditions to manage.
We present an unusual case of transorbital penetrating pontine injury and discuss imaging, diagnosis, management strategy, and anatomy–injury correlation. A 23-year-old man sustained a penetrating cranial injury from a bamboo chopstick that extended from the right orbit to the pons and cerebellum. Using a frontotemporal approach, we successfully removed the chopstick. Follow-up studies confirmed a good outcome.
Preoperative imaging, correct diagnosis, and surgical treatment are necessary to manage transorbital penetrating pontine injuries caused by spear-like objects, with specific attention paid to effective exposure and inventive means with total removal of the foreign object without causing further injury. A trajectory through the superior orbital fissure and paralateral to the cavernous sinus and into the pons seems to be the most prevalent and influences management of removal and injuries.