Splinters
Posted: Monday, November 01, 2010
by John Laurusonis
Doctors Medical Center
A splinter is a small, firm foreign body embedded in the skin or soft tissue. The most common type of splinter is wooden, either as an irregular fragment, or perhaps a thorn or a fragment of a toothpick. Other types of splinters could include various metals, glass, fiber glass, plastic, tooth fragments from a bite, or bone fragments from a nearby fracture. The urgency to remove a splinter depends upon the unique circumstances of the occurrence. The most common reasons to remove a splinter would be to reduce pain and prevent splinter-borne infection. Sometimes removing a splinter could be as simple as grasping it with forceps ("tweezers") and pulling it out. Sometimes a sterile needle can be used to coax the splinter out. One type of superficial "splinter" is a bee stinger which can be carefully removed sometimes by rubbing over it with the firm edge of a credit card. At other times, when the splinter is more covert, other techniques and considerations have to be utilized.
The same considerations would apply to other splinters. Substances like stainless steel fragments or a person's own bone fragments would probably be more or less inert and not have to be removed. Glass splinters would have to be considered on a case by case basis. If there were large glass splinters which continued to cut and irritate the surrounding tissue, they might need to come out. Gravel splinters would probably need to be removed by some technique due to their infectious potential. Plastic might be inert depending on its composition and the mechanism of injury. Bullet fragments and splinters are often left alone and set up for drainage. Bullet shots are usually supersonic and the air friction produces heat and the bullet usually arrives to the target sterile. It is the shirt, coat, or a skin bacterium that gets pushed into the wound that is the problem.
The take home lesson is this: if a splinter is superficial and right there where you can gently tug it out, go ahead. Be aware, though, that additional splinters could be present that you're not seeing. Check the splinter site frequently after removal for signs of infection or foreign body reaction. Don't dig around in a wound with a "sterilized" needle trying to find a splinter. This could really stir up a nasty infection. If there's any doubt in your mind, or if there appears to be a foreign body reaction or infection, consult a physician with the skills to evaluate and possibly remove it. There are matters of proper wound cleaning and tetanus immunization which may need to be addressed, lean toward the option of early physician consultation. If redness or streaking appears at or near the site or if pus is coming out of site get medical help as soon as possible.
John Drew Laurusonis
Doctors Medical Center
www.doctorsmedicalctr.com
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