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Arizona man describes shears impaling eye socket

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ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this image provided by the University Medical Center in Tucson, a CT scan shows a pair of pruning shears embedded in the head of an 86-year-old Green Valley, Ariz., man before it was removed by Medical Center surgeons in Tucson on July 30, 2011. Leroy Luetscher was accidentally impaled through his eye socket after falling on the shears while working in his yard, the handle penetrating his eye socket and reaching down into his neck. He is expected to make a full recovery. (AP Photo/University Medical Center,Tucson, Arizona)
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Leroy Luetscher stands outside his home in Green Valley, Ariz., Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011. The 86-year-old, who was impaled through the eye socket with a pair of pruning shears while gardening last month, still has slight swelling in his eyelids and minor double vision but has otherwise recovered. (AP Photo/Green Valley News, Regina Ford) MANDATORY CREDIT

PHOENIX >> An 86-year-old Arizona man had just finished trimming plants in his backyard when he fell face-first into his pruning shears, sending one of the handles through his right eye socket and halfway into his head.

Unsure what had happened, Leroy Luetscher reached up and felt the shears jutting from his face. He was covered in blood and in more pain than he’d ever felt in his life.

"I didn’t know if my eyeball was still there or what," Luetscher told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "The pain was so bad that I guess I wasn’t afraid to die."

Luetscher managed to put his T-shirt over the wound to stanch the bleeding. He said the excruciating pain is what kept him conscious and able to walk to the laundry room of his house to beckon his longtime live-in girlfriend, who called 911.

Luetscher, a Wisconsin native who now lives in southern Arizona’s Green Valley, has made a remarkable recovery since the July 30 accident. He still has slight swelling in his eyelids and minor double vision but is otherwise OK.

Doctors who removed the shears and rebuilt a bone in Luetscher’s eye socket say it could have been much worse.

After Luetscher’s girlfriend, Arpy Williams, called 911, an ambulance rushed him to University Medical Center in Tucson, where a team of surgeons took scans of his brain and came up with a plan to treat him.

The learned the handle had gone 6 inches into his head and was resting against the carotid artery in his neck.

"It was a bit overwhelming," said Dr. Lynn Polonski, one of Luetscher’s surgeons. "It was wedged in there so tightly, you could not move it. It was part of his face."

Polonski said the team made incisions underneath his right upper lip and his sinus wall, allowing them to loosen the handle of the pruning shears with their fingers. "Once we were able to loosen it up, it went fairly easily," he said.

Doctors rebuilt Luetscher’s orbital floor with a titanium plate and put him on antibiotics for 20 days to stave off an infection that could have proved fatal.

Polonski said so many things could have gone much worse for Luetscher. The shears could have ruptured his eye ball, hit his brain or severed his carotid artery.

"You know, if it went a little bit in a different direction, it basically could have killed him or he could have had a stroke," Polonski said. "He’s was very lucky that it missed all vital structures and we were basically able to put him back together."

Polonski said he’s never seen anything like Luetscher’s injury in his 13 years as a surgeon.

Luetscher said he was born and raised about 30 miles outside Madison, Wis., and worked as an executive in the dairy industry before retiring to Arizona in 1998.

He said he’s not sure he’ll be doing much more gardening in the future.

"If that instrument had gone in any direction different than it did, I would have bled right there to death," he said.

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