Methods of extrication and spinal immobilisation following trauma remains controversial. There is a consensus shift towards encouraging patients to self-extricate from vehicles after collisions and reduced use of hard cervical collars. Difficulties in conducting randomised controlled trials in this area means that case reports are important in adding to the existing evidence base. This case of an 81-year-old female polytrauma patient suggests that self-extrication, and not using hard cervical collars is safe practice, even in the context of significant multi-level spinal injuries.
Vascular malformations are rare, incompletely understood and heterogeneous in presentation and clinical course. They are known to be associated with a number of benign syndromes, commonly presenting in childhood. Angiomatosis is a form of vascular malformation, hardly documented in the English literature, and has only rarely been described in the small bowel. We present a case of a middle-aged female who developed small bowel obstruction secondary to diffuse small bowel angiomatosis and subsequently developed aggressive multifocal small cell lung cancer 2 months later. Her condition rapidly deteriorated with multiple metastases and she passed away 4 months later secondary to brain metastases and diffuse disease. Small cell lung cancer is well known for its association with paraneoplastic syndromes and has been reported to cause a rise in vascular endothelial growth factor. We postulate that in this case angiomatosis presented as a paraneoplastic syndrome associated with small cell lung cancer.
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