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Case Report of a Nipple Amputation After a Horse...
Journal article

Case Report of a Nipple Amputation After a Horse Bite

Abstract

Horse related injuries include falling from a horse, being stepped on by a horse, kicks, or bites. Bites are rare and often associated with fatalities. We present a case of a 41-year-old healthy female who suffered a complete amputation of her right nipple and abrasion of the areola following a horse bite. We managed the nipple injury as a full-thickness skin graft, similar to that of a compromised nipple in a reduction mammaplasty or mastopexy case. Barring a lack of projection and minor hypopigmentation, the nipple had normal sensation with no scar contracture. Overall, the patient was happy with her final outcome. With a healthy, minimally contaminated wound bed, and lack of poor wound healing risk factors, we believe that treating a nipple amputation as a full thickness skin graft in the emergency setting results in aesthetic outcomes, sensation, and patient satisfaction comparable if not superior to other means of nipple reconstruction in adults.

Authors

Wong CR; McRae MH; Voineskos SH

Journal

Plastic Surgery Case Studies, Vol. 7, ,

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

January 1, 2021

DOI

10.1177/2513826x211027013

ISSN

2513-826X

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