Teen survives major speargun injury

The spear shot through Yasser Lopez's skull is seen in this x-ray image provided by University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital.

The spear shot through Yasser Lopez's skull is seen in this x-ray image provided by University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital.

Published Jun 20, 2012

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Washington - Florida doctors are hopeful for the recovery of a 16-year-old boy who miraculously survived being shot through the head with a fishing spear.

Yasser Lopez, 16, was fishing with friends in south Florida when one of them was loading a speargun that misfired, shooting Lopez through the forehead, five centimetres above his right eye.

The spear passed through the right side of his brain, penetrated the rear of his skull and exited part way from the back of his head. Most of the one-metre-long spear was left protruding from the front of the teenager's head.

“It's a striking injury that you don't see everyday - a patient arriving awake and speaking, with a three-foot spear through his head,” said George Garcia, assistant professor of surgery at the University of Miami's Jackson Memorial Hospital, where Lopez was treated.

“The first obstacle is probably to not allow yourself to get distracted by the obvious kind of sensational injury. The second obstacle was to keep him calm and still so we could stabilise the spear.”

A rebar cutter, provided by Miami firefighters, was used to shorten the spear so that x-rays and other scans could be made.

Surgeons eventually worked for three hours to remove the projectile.

“We are very optimistic about his healing. It has been 11 days since he had been injured, and young people rehabilitate from injuries like that incredibly well,” neurologist Ross Bullock said. “The amazing thing is that the boy is able to speak a little now. He is saying a few words, short sentences, and he is out of bed.”

Lopez's parents kept the news private until this week. The young man remains in serious condition and is expected to stay in a rehabilitation hospital for the next two to three months.

“There is always a huge risk of death with a case like this,” Bullock said. “The spear miraculously missed the main blood vessels of the brain and also missed the vital deep-seated structures of the brain.” - Sapa-dpa

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