LITTLETON, Colo. Jan 16, 2005 – A dentist found the source of the toothache
Patrick Lawler was complaining about on the roof of his mouth: a four-inch nail the
construction worker had unknowingly embedded in his skull six days earlier.
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A dental X-ray shows a four-inch nail in the skull of Patrick Lawler, 23, that
was removed Thursday |
A nail gun backfired on Lawler, 23, on Jan. 6 while working
in Breckenridge, a ski resort town in the central Colorado mountains. The tool sent
a nail into a piece of wood nearby, but Lawler didn't realize a second nail had shot
through his mouth, said his sister, Lisa Metcalse.
Following the accident, Lawler had what he thought was a minor
toothache and blurry vision. On Wednesday, after painkillers and ice didn't ease
the pain, he went to a dental office where his wife, Katerina, works.
"We all are friends, so I thought the (dentists) were
joking … then the doctor came out and said 'There's really a nail,'" Katerina
Lawler said. "Patrick just broke down. I mean, he had been eating ice cream
to help the swelling."
He was taken to a suburban Denver hospital, where he underwent a four-hour surgery.
The nail had plunged 1 1/2 inches into his brain, barely missing his right eye, Metcalse
said.
"This is the second one we've seen in this hospital where
the person was injured by the nail gun and didn't actually realize the nail had been
imbedded in their skull," neurosurgeon Sean Markey told KUSA-TV in Denver. "But
it's a pretty rare injury."
Lawler was recovering Sunday in the hospital, where he was
expected to spend several more days.
Despite his lack of medical insurance and hospital bills between
$80,000 and $100,000, Katerina Lawler said her husband is in good spirits.
"The doctors said, 'If you're going to have a nail in
the brain, that's the way you want it to be,'" she said. "He's the luckiest
guy, ever." |