The Hamilton Spectator

Beware of ‘Halloween hand’ and other scary holiday-related injuries

One slip and you could wind up in the hospital

- MARI A. SCHAEFER PHILADELPH­IA —

Hey, parents, if you value your fingers, be careful as you carve up the household jack-o’-lantern. One slip of the knife, and you could wind up in the hospital with “Halloween hand.”

During October and November 2013, more than half of the estimated 4,400 Halloweenr­elated injuries involved pumpkin carving, the Consumer Product Safety Commission reported.

The injuries ranged from minor cuts to major laceration­s across the palm that sever tendons, nerves and blood vessels, said Asif M. Ilyas, a hand surgeon at the Rothman Institute. Ilyas sees several Halloween injuries a year, including knives that go “through and through,” sticking out of the hand, and even amputated fingers.

“It can be pretty bloody and messy,” Ilyas said, adding that the hand is highly vascular and that patients were often shocked by the amount of blood from their injuries. “Even a small cut can bleed a lot.”

It is often the nondominan­t hand — the one without the knife — that is injured, Ilyas said. “It’s like bagel injuries, except they are using much bigger knives.”

The typical Halloween-hand patient tends to be a mother who is helping her kids carve up a pumpkin. Less common but still related to the holiday are the injuries to hands and limbs that happen when firecracke­rs for pyrotechni­c displays blow up. Those patients tend to be male, Ilyas said.

A 2010 study from the journal Pediatrics found that finger and hand wounds accounted for 17.6 per cent of all injuries on Halloween among children under 19. One-third of those injuries resulted in laceration­s; one-fifth were fractures. Children ages 10 to 14 suffered 30 per cent of the injuries.

The American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons (AAOS) warns against using kitchen knives to do your carving. But are pumpkin-carving kits safer?

In 2004, researcher­s at Upstate Medical Center in Syracuse, N.Y., used cadaver hands to study the dangers of pumpkin carving. They found that specific pumpkin-carving tools were, indeed safer.

With severe injuries, such as severed tendons, recovery can take three-plus months, he said.

Aside from “Halloween hand,” said AAOS spokespers­on Kevin G. Shea, leg injuries are common due to falls caused by long costumes or costumes that impair vision.

If you injure yourself while carving, immediatel­y put pressure on the wound, and use gauze bandages to wrap the wound tight to control bleeding, Ilyas said.

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