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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Jun 2001
The effect of surgically implanted bullet fragments on the spinal cord in a rabbit model.
- N L Tindel, A E Marcillo, B K Tay, R P Bunge, and F J Eismont.
- Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, University of Miami School of Medicine, Florida 33136, USA.
- J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2001 Jun 1;83-A(6):884-90.
BackgroundWhether or not to remove bullets or bullet fragments from the spinal column of a neurologically intact patient has been a subject of continual debate. The controversy is due in part to a lack of information about the long-term effects of bullet fragments on spinal cord tissue. Although many studies have demonstrated the toxic effects of metal fragments on brain tissue, to our knowledge no one has evaluated the effects of the metals contained in commercially available bullets on spinal cord tissue.MethodsCopper, aluminum, and lead fragments from three commercially available bullet cartridges were implanted in intradural and extradural locations in seventeen New Zealand White rabbits. At an average of 9.8 months, the metal content of specimens of blood, cerebrospinal fluid, and liver were determined. The spinal cords were harvested and examined histologically.ResultsThere was a significant increase in the copper level of blood from the rabbits with an implanted copper fragment compared with that of the control animals (p = 0.007). Concentrations of copper and lead were not elevated, compared with the control values, in the serum or liver. Histological examination of the spinal cords revealed major destruction of both the axons and the myelin of the dorsal column adjacent to the intradural copper fragments. Intradural fragments of lead caused similar destruction of myelin and axons in the dorsal column, but to a lesser degree. Minimal spinal cord or meningeal histological changes were noted around the aluminum intradural fragments, and no pathological changes were found near any fragments placed in an extradural location.ConclusionsThe results of this study show that certain metals contained in commercially available bullets can cause varying degrees of neural destruction independent of the initial mechanical injury caused by implantation. Of the three metals tested, copper fragments consistently caused a substantial localized area of neural injury within the spinal cord.Clinical RelevanceIn our study, copper fragments caused local neural toxicity involving as much as 10% of the spinal cord area, suggesting that there may be a scientific basis for removal of copper fragments lodged in the spinal cord, even in the absence of a neurological deficit.
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