Your most amazing wounds and gore!!!! Anyone care to share?

Specialties Wound

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Hey, y'all! Okay, I know this could get a bit scary, so if you're not into this kind of thing, please move on! This has the potential to become VERY GRAPHIC. Disclaimer over. ;>) However, I'm figuring that if this topic could keep us entertained for HOURS on a slow night, surely some of you have some stories to share that get your eyes gleamin' as well. ;>P A PICU nurse who was floated to my unit the other day was telling us about a pediatric organ donor they had had recently. She was invited to witness the actual surgery and the 'claiming' of the organs that were being distributed to various recipients. She said that, despite the sadness and overwhelming loss she felt when the patient was declared clinically dead (she'd taken care of that little girl for weeks and had become very attached to her and her family), she could not help but be completely fascinated by witnessing the procedure. She hadn't been in surgery since nursing school, and she said she just could not get over seeing the cavity open and empty like that after the organs had been 'claimed'. This got us started on our favorite gross-out wound and cavity stories, and you know NURSES, who can freak out a burly man in a nanosecond with stories of pus, blood, flesh, and insects!!! We, I admit, were laughing our butts off and enjoying every minute of it, all the while cackling that our husbands would have fled the room fifteen minutes ago in absolute horror. Call it stress relief. So, in continuing with that conversation, I thought I'd see if y'all would like to contribute. I promise you that your stories will be recounted truthfully, down to the stickiest, smelliest detail!!! should we ever get another slow night (which, considering the trend, will be NEVER!!). Here are some of mine... mine come from nursing school, as I am a relatively new grad and have been NICU nursing since graduation. In nursing school, during our MICU rotation, I had a lovely older woman who had undergone a TAH. The surgeon had accidentally nicked her bowel, and after multiple trips to OR to attempt to repair the damage, she had developed a fistula and was leaking fecal matter into her now spacious abdominal cavity. She had this ENORMOUS abd dressing that had to be changed, and being the student-nurse-gopher that I was, it was my job, along with two other nurses in attendance, to change it! I swear, it took almost TWO hours to change this sucker. Her entire abdominal cavity was open, and when I removed the packing, I got to see EVERYTHING. I know, I'm a dork, but it was totally spectacular. This brownish, thick, melted-milkshake fluid was leaking out, and when it touched my gloved hands for the first time, it was so warm it SCARED ME! I actually jerked my hands back because I was startled! When she had been rinsed suffeciently, it was time to repack the wound. I kid you not, my entire hands were inside of her abdomen, and I felt like a surgeon! We just kept packing and packing and packing and I thought, dear God, there's no way she can hold all of this inside her! She was on one of those vacuum-seal doodads, with the sponge? I forget what they're called now... we packed the sponge in and applied this HUUUUUUUUGE op-site. Realize, I was in SCHOOL and was just totally blown away by this! I went home high on endorphins and grinning like a psychopath. Ahhhhhhhhhhh, the gore. Just something about it, you know? :>)

I was working in the ER one Sunday morning and a gentlemen presented with the complaint that his eyes were burning. Upon further assessment of the situation, his eyes were burning because of the copious amount of purulent drainage that was dripping off his head. This poor gentlemen had a skin condition they called atopic dermatitis.(I call it YUCK!) When he took his stocking hat off, it appeared as though someone had dumped a can of split pea soup over his head. It wasn't just his head though, it was his entire skin surface. I have never seen so much pus in my life. The particular highlight for me was however when I was given the privelage of fishing out the wads of cottonballs that he had packed in his ears to keep the pus from running down into his ear canals.

Just another day in paradise!

:cool:

Specializes in Er and PICU.

I just have one story. I had this pt later on their stay. Well evidently they have a lot of cats at home and they got scratched by one and later was admitted for i thinkm chf comps. upon standing to be weighed her leg burst and maggots flowed out of their leg endlessly.

tattooednurse :eek:

Specializes in ICU, nutrition.
We once had a s/p CABG guy in the SICU whose sternum became infected requiring removal of his sternum. We had to do wet to drys right on his heart.

Ewwww, we have one of those right now. Thank God I'm not a heart nurse yet (although I guess my time will come).:chuckle

While I was in nursing school I had a paitient come into the hospital with her greater right toe missing due to gangrene. We asked her where the toe was and she said she could not bring it in because the cat ate it. That one got me.

I had the chance to work with leaches they are very cool. I did not like having to kill them once they had done the job.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

OK, I think I'm gonna throw up now!! That's one of the grossest things I have EVER read. I was going to tell a new story--actually, it happened just last night when one of my young-adult unit (LTC) residents asked the CNA to help "clean him up". She had never taken care of him before and didn't know his history (he's a head-injured patient who also happens to be a sexual predator). To make a long story short, the rotten little b*****d had been watching a XXX-rated movie in his room, and when she handed him a washcloth, he "slimed" her. YUCK. But that's not half as disgusting as the cat eating a gangrenous toe (gag, retch). I looked at one of my own cats just now and asked her if any of them would do such a thing. She just stared back at me and licked her chops.:uhoh21:

I was helping in the ER one evening and a farmer was brought in. He had been ran over by a full hopper wagon of soybeans with the hitch slicing him up the back from his rectum to his midback. Very sad. His wife found him in the field. He was DOA.

Iam lovin' this thread! don't stop!! Tell me more!!:D

COOL COOL !!!! love the wound stories !!!!! I do wound care part time for home health ..and I have been known to quiver with excitement when I get a new wet draining .... wound ......My husband thinks I am one sick puppy ......glad I am not the only one ....tee hee

oh..and there was once a pt who had slipped in th etub..ya know that lever for plugging/unpluggint the drain? ya know how some tubs have it one the tub spigot? she slipped and fell and..well...ripped her @$$h0le....

owwwwww!!! :eek:

PT with Fournier's gangrene of the member and scrotum. Area was debrided-talk about slice and dice- and we did wet to dry dsgs q shift. Terrible smell, terrible wound, and he would have bladder spasms and urinate into all of this mess even though he had a foley.

I'm a psych nurse now but had some memories of when I was a paramedic (who by the way are the only people I know that can scrape a guy's intestines off the road and return back to base for the remainder of their spaghetti dinner without missing a beat)

I once had to make a pronouncement on a fellow who was drag racing an 18 wheeler when he hit a bridge abutment and his cab became an accordian that burst into flames. He was a bit crisp and it appeared that all his organs were shoved up into his upper body cavity, it looked rather unreal and I was compelled to try for a pulse, of course it wasn't there...there were alot of war stories, but this poor soul has stood out.

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