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Whiptail Stingray Injury
Simon Laurent, MD, Olivier Martinet, MD, Helene Cuq, MD, Alain Rind, MD, Philippe Durasnel, MD, Claire Lenne, MD, Renaud Blondé, MD Wilderness & Environmental Medicine Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages (June 2018) DOI: /j.wem Copyright © 2018 Wilderness Medical Society Terms and Conditions
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Figure 1 Fillet knife used to decompress the tension pneumothorax.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine , DOI: ( /j.wem ) Copyright © 2018 Wilderness Medical Society Terms and Conditions
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Figure 2 Pen used as a chest tube.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine , DOI: ( /j.wem ) Copyright © 2018 Wilderness Medical Society Terms and Conditions
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Figure 3 Computed tomography of the chest, showing the intrathoracic foreign body, pneumomediastinum, left hemopneumothorax, contusion of the superior lung lobe, and thoracic emphysema. Wilderness & Environmental Medicine , DOI: ( /j.wem ) Copyright © 2018 Wilderness Medical Society Terms and Conditions
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Figure 4 Three-dimensional computed tomography scan; note the foreign body extending from the first left intercostal space to the center of the chest. Wilderness & Environmental Medicine , DOI: ( /j.wem ) Copyright © 2018 Wilderness Medical Society Terms and Conditions
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Figure 5 Stinger removed from the lung.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine , DOI: ( /j.wem ) Copyright © 2018 Wilderness Medical Society Terms and Conditions
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