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http://www.9news.com/acm_news.aspx?...MPLATEID=0c76dce6-ac1f-02d8-0047-c589c01ca7bf
He accidentally hit himself in the mouth with a tool - and didn't think much of it. But a construction worker in Breckenridge was in for the surprise of his life when X-rays of a minor toothache revealed a close call he never imagined. Now, he will appear live on the NBC-TV "Today" show on Tuesday, Jan. 18.
"I'm like, what are you doing? Is this a joke?" his wife recalled saying when she saw the X-ray. "And they were like, no, no, no - there's really a nail in there!"
Twenty-three-year-old Patrick Lawler shot himself with his own nail gun - and didn't realize it for six days. The long, construction nail entered through his upper right lip and stopped itself just inside the front part of his brain - barely missing his right eye by millimeters. The X-rays he took at the dental office where his wife works show an unbelievable sight of the nail stretching from his teeth to his skull.
"The nail gun had recoiled and it must have recoiled at a high turbulence, flipped 180 degrees and somehow shot or angled the nail through the front of my lip," says Lawler. "For six days we were icing it and taking Advil, thinking I got hit real hard - like a punch. Way off!"
Initially, neither Lawler nor his doctors thought much of his toothaches and blurry vision. After he took the X-rays nearly a week after the incident, he was immediately rushed from his home down to Littleton Adventist Hospital, where the chief neurosurgeon has worked on three similar cases.
"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," says Dr. Sean Markey. "But it's a pretty rare injury."
On Thursday night, a team of surgeons performed the risky, six-hour operation. They cut open his skull to see exactly where the nail was. Then, they removed it through the path it went in - so as to minimize hurting other areas. Loss of sight, brain injury and death were possible outcomes.
"I was freaking out, yeah," said his wife Katerina. "I didn't sleep for a long time."
But Friday morning, Lawler was back to his dry-humored self again - minus the nail.
"Here it is," he wisecracked, posing with the extracted nail against his bandaged head. "I'm gonna have a nail tattooed onto my face."
The Lawlers plan to frame the X-rays, cat scans and the nail and hang them in their living room. As for his job building custom homes in the posh Breckenridge resort areas, Lawler's not sure about going back.
"It definitely makes one think about a profession change, you know? I don't know - I might use a smaller (nail) gun. Or maybe I'll stick to hammers."
Patrick Lawler doesn't have health insurance, and his hospital bills are estimated to cost upwards of $100,000 according to his family. So anyone who wishes to help the family out can do so through: Colorado Business Bank of Littleton. Call 303-293-2265 and ask for Brittney Penrose and say you'd like to donate to the "Patrick Lawler Fund."
Here's the X-ray:
He accidentally hit himself in the mouth with a tool - and didn't think much of it. But a construction worker in Breckenridge was in for the surprise of his life when X-rays of a minor toothache revealed a close call he never imagined. Now, he will appear live on the NBC-TV "Today" show on Tuesday, Jan. 18.
"I'm like, what are you doing? Is this a joke?" his wife recalled saying when she saw the X-ray. "And they were like, no, no, no - there's really a nail in there!"
Twenty-three-year-old Patrick Lawler shot himself with his own nail gun - and didn't realize it for six days. The long, construction nail entered through his upper right lip and stopped itself just inside the front part of his brain - barely missing his right eye by millimeters. The X-rays he took at the dental office where his wife works show an unbelievable sight of the nail stretching from his teeth to his skull.
"The nail gun had recoiled and it must have recoiled at a high turbulence, flipped 180 degrees and somehow shot or angled the nail through the front of my lip," says Lawler. "For six days we were icing it and taking Advil, thinking I got hit real hard - like a punch. Way off!"
Initially, neither Lawler nor his doctors thought much of his toothaches and blurry vision. After he took the X-rays nearly a week after the incident, he was immediately rushed from his home down to Littleton Adventist Hospital, where the chief neurosurgeon has worked on three similar cases.
"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," says Dr. Sean Markey. "But it's a pretty rare injury."
On Thursday night, a team of surgeons performed the risky, six-hour operation. They cut open his skull to see exactly where the nail was. Then, they removed it through the path it went in - so as to minimize hurting other areas. Loss of sight, brain injury and death were possible outcomes.
"I was freaking out, yeah," said his wife Katerina. "I didn't sleep for a long time."
But Friday morning, Lawler was back to his dry-humored self again - minus the nail.
"Here it is," he wisecracked, posing with the extracted nail against his bandaged head. "I'm gonna have a nail tattooed onto my face."
The Lawlers plan to frame the X-rays, cat scans and the nail and hang them in their living room. As for his job building custom homes in the posh Breckenridge resort areas, Lawler's not sure about going back.
"It definitely makes one think about a profession change, you know? I don't know - I might use a smaller (nail) gun. Or maybe I'll stick to hammers."
Patrick Lawler doesn't have health insurance, and his hospital bills are estimated to cost upwards of $100,000 according to his family. So anyone who wishes to help the family out can do so through: Colorado Business Bank of Littleton. Call 303-293-2265 and ask for Brittney Penrose and say you'd like to donate to the "Patrick Lawler Fund."
Here's the X-ray:
