6-year-old’s arm amputated after reattachment rejected

The six-year-old boy whose left arm was reattached just over a week ago in Monterrey, Nuevo León, had to undergo surgery again late last week to remove the limb after his body rejected it.

He remains in intensive care.

The boy lost his arm on July 29 after putting it inside an operating washing machine.

Fast action by his mother, a nurse, to contain the bleeding along with quick response by Red Cross paramedics have been credited with saving the boy’s life.

After a 10-hour procedure, doctors at the Hospital of Traumatology and Orthopedics No. 21 successfully reattached the amputated limb, which had been placed in ice immediately after the accident.

Five days after the reattachment surgery, the youngster contracted a fever and his arm began to turn purple. Physicians decided to amputate the limb in order to avoid further health complications.

A source close to the case told the newspaper El Universal that the boy’s arm was severely injured after getting caught in the washing machine, and that getting the arteries and tendons to bond was a complicated task.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
lascocinas

Interior Ministry confirms public access to Las Cocinas, meeting one of the Punta de Mita protesters’ demands

0
The Nayarit coast's burgeoning fame as an attractive tourist destination has inevitably led to increased development, which has just as inevitably led to protests on environmental and public-access grounds.
oil spill cleanup on Gulf beach

The Feb. 6 oil spill continues to impact Gulf coast beaches and marine life

0
The oil spill that was slow to be officially recognized when it first happened is now being slow to stop causing damage, as hydrocarbons still stain Gulf coast beaches and affect marine life.
Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya

US charges Sinaloa governor, 9 state officials with drug trafficking

11
Prosecutors in the United States have formally accused Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya and nine other current and former Mexican officials of drug trafficking and related weapons offenses, alleging that they colluded with the Sinaloa Cartel.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity