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Journal Article

Citation

Gowens PA, Davenport RJ, Kerr J, Sanderson RJ, Marsden AK. Emerg. Med. J. 2003; 20(4): 391-393.

Affiliation

The Scottish Ambulance Service, Edinburgh, UK. pgowens@scotamb.co.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

12835372

PMCID

PMC1726156

Abstract

In 1929 the dancer Isadora Duncan died from strangulation and carotid artery insult when her scarf caught in the wheels of a motor vehicle in which she was travelling. As part of the Edinburgh Festival scene, cycle propelled rickshaws are in popular use as short range taxis. The case is presented of a student who sustained a laryngeal rupture from strangulation with a scarf in the same way as Isadora. Despite an out of hospital cardiorespiratory arrest, severe laryngeal trauma, and carotid artery damage resulting in hemiparesis, the patient was successfully resuscitated and recovered with no neurological deficit. It is believed that this is the first recorded survival from this condition.


Language: en

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