Carmarthen Journal

Joiner gives docs thumbs-up

- ROBERT DALLING Reporter rob.dalling@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A JOINER who accidental­ly cut his own thumb off in a workplace accident has expressed his gratitude to a Swansea Bay surgeon who stopped him from losing it for good after a “race against time.”

Arwel Davies spent 10 minutes looking for the severed digit before taking it to the hospital with him, even though that meant walking through the doors carrying a circular saw.

The 42-year-old, from Llansadwrn in Carmarthen­shire, eventually found his missing thumb jammed inside a safety guard.

Explaining the reaction many had as he walked in, he said: “I had some funny looks when I walked in – they probably thought I was going to kick off but as soon as I told the receptioni­st my thumb was inside, it was fine. They took the thumb out, put it in a bag and sent me for surgery.”

The accident happened while Mr Davies was working outside a customer’s house in Llandeilo.

He explained he was using the saw to cut some wood clamped to a bench, a task he had performed countless times before, when it came off the clamps and disaster struck.

Mr Davies explained: “I went to grab the wood with my right hand, while the left kept the saw going without really thinking. In less than a second my thumb was off. It was painful but not as painful as I thought it would be. That was probably down to the adrenaline running through me.

“I was sweating loads. Surprising­ly, there wasn’t much blood. I was told it was because it was such a clean cut. I thought it would have been spurting everywhere.

“I didn’t panic as you’re no use to anyone. I went into auto pilot: look for my thumb and get to hospital as quick as I can. I spent 10 minutes looking for it on site thinking it had been kicked out. If you look at a saw, the dust is blown backwards. It then dawned on me that it may be inside the saw. I had a look and it was there. I couldn’t get it out, so I had to take it with me.”

Although Mr Davies initially went to Glangwili Hospital in Carmarthen, he was transferre­d to the Welsh Centre for Burns and Plastic Surgery in Swansea’s Morriston Hospital. There he came under the expert care of consultant plastic surgeon Thomas Bragg and his team.

Mr Davies said: “They knew I was coming so within the hour I was prepped for theatre and in. I can’t remember much after that because of the anaestheti­c.

“They fused the bone together with titanium wire. How they did it I don’t know. When I came around in a hospital bed my thumb was in a cast and all I could see was the tip. I was in a bit of a daze and it was near midnight.

“The next morning, after I woke up, they started putting leeches on my thumb to make it bleed. They are very clever. They said the artery was pumping in too much blood for the veins to handle so they put a leech on to help bleed it.

“They said the chances of it taking weren’t good, because of the state of the thumb in the saw. But they have done a fantastic job.

“I’ve starting to get feeling back and it’s actually looking like a thumb again now. Mr Bragg and his team are absolute stars.

“I can’t thank them enough. They were so very profession­al.

“I was expecting to wake up without a thumb, to be honest with you.

“But they worked a miracle. They said it would take six to 12 months before it fully heals but I’m selfemploy­ed and do need to go back to work. In the meantime I’m left twiddling my thumbs – something I can do again now!”

Mr Bragg admitted that he and his team faced a race against time to save Mr Davies’s thumb. He said: “The clock is ticking on injuries like this and you only have four to six hours after the injury to re-establish the blood supply before you lose the thumb. The saw makes quite a mess of the soft tissues, crushing and ripping the tissues. This makes a difficult situation worse. On meeting Mr Davies we were circumspec­t about our chances of success but were very keen to do what we could.

“After six hours of microsurge­ry we were delighted to produce a stable thumb with good blood flow. The vessels are just over 1mm in size, requiring a steady hand after nightfall. The suture material is just a little bit smaller than a human hair.

“Injuries like this are some of the most devastatin­g due to the role of the thumb in facilitati­ng hand function. In a young joiner whose livelihood depends on his hands, the stakes are even higher.”

 ?? SWANSEA BAY UNIVERSITY HEALTH BOARD ?? Arwel Davies with consultant surgeon Thomas Bragg, left, and team members Kareem El-shishtawy and Sheela Vinay.
SWANSEA BAY UNIVERSITY HEALTH BOARD Arwel Davies with consultant surgeon Thomas Bragg, left, and team members Kareem El-shishtawy and Sheela Vinay.

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