Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

For starters, procedures turn painful

Brown, Taylor sidelined after medical glitches

- By Adam Hill Contact Adam Hill at ahill@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ AdamHillLV­RJ on Twitter.

The Chargers will host the Raiders Sunday in a fierce AFC West rivalry between teams that recently have relocated and are enjoying new stadiums.

It also will be a matchup of teams that have gone through the most bizarre medical incidents of the 2020 season.

Raiders offensive tackle Trent Brown was wheeled out of the locker room in Cleveland last week and taken to the hospital with what has been described as a mishap with an intravenou­s injection.

The Chargers lost their starting quarterbac­k Tyrod Taylor when his lung was punctured by a team doctor who was administer­ing a painkillin­g shot to enable Taylor to play through cracked ribs suffered in an opening-week victory. Los Angeles is 1-5 since losing Taylor.

According to orthopaedi­c and sports medicine physician Caleb Pinegar of Las Vegas, the situation involving Brown is far rarer.

Reports indicate air entered his bloodstrea­m during the applicatio­n of the IV and potentiall­y put him at risk of suffering an embolism.

The exact frequency of such a routine procedure going wrong is difficult to nail down because not all cases are reported as the effects can be relatively minor at times. Pinegar said his preliminar­y research indicated anywhere from .003 percent to .1 percent rate of occurrence.

Among the things that could go wrong are the bag of solution being hung too low or the tubing may not have the air fully bled out before it’s hooked up.

“As the IV gets administer­ed, if it pushes this little section of air into the vessel, now you have air trapped inside the body,” he said. “The problem

with that is if it gets to an area where it actually blocks blood flow beyond that spot, it can cause problems.”

Pinegar added the body will almost always correct the issue, but the stay in the hospital is to make sure the air pocket stays away from important structures in the body.

“Let’s say that gets introduced to the arm, as it gets back to the main vessels toward the heart, it can cause a person to feel short of breath, pained breathing, labored breathing,” he said. “It’s usually that anxiety and panic that freaks everybody out. … The likelihood is he was having shortness of breath, pained breathing and just got very, very nervous.”

Taylor’s situation is quite different. The kind of pain injection he was given shortly before kickoff against the Chiefs in September happens more often. The doctor suggested that’s

why it’s not a very common practice, particular­ly outside of sports.

When the injection is given, the goal is to numb the area enough so a player can compete through the injury.

“You’re not going to cure the (cracked) rib, but you’re trying to make it so he can be functional,” said Pinegar, who indicated there can be problems in up to 6 percent of such injections.” That space where the nerves are beneath the ribs is really, really tight. You’re talking a couple millimeter­s. To numb the area, you have to get the needle deep enough without going too deep.”

When the needle punctures the lung, the air escapes as breath is drawn and at that point, the lung collapses.

The treatment can include surgically decompress­ing the lung or putting

in a tube to drain out the excess air. Athletic competitio­n, particular­ly in such a demanding contact situation as NFL football, would not be advisable until the lung is fully healed, which typically takes six to eight weeks.

The mistake proved costly to Taylor. He returns Sunday against the Raiders but as Herbert’s backup and may not regain his job because rookie Justin Herbert has performed admirably in the veteran’s absence in most categories except the win-loss column.

Brown, according to Pinegar, shouldn’t be forced to miss any game action because of his incident. “He shouldn’t have any complicati­ons at all,” the doctor said.

 ?? Emilee Chinn The Associated Press ?? Chargers QB Tyrod Taylor returns after missing six games after his lung was punctured when he received a painkillin­g injection.
Emilee Chinn The Associated Press Chargers QB Tyrod Taylor returns after missing six games after his lung was punctured when he received a painkillin­g injection.

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