Torn-off fingers or hands, severe burns to the face, destroyed eyes. What doctors see on the operating table on New Year's Eve is something they are only familiar with from war surgery. "These are injuries that happen on the front line in Ukraine. We know what they look like because we provide interdisciplinary care to Ukrainian soldiers here," says Professor Adrian Dragu, Director of the Department of Plastic and Hand Surgery at Dresden University Hospital.
Injuries mainly to the hands and face
Sometimes patients have injuries to their hands and face - in places that are not protected by clothing. Alcoholized men under the age of 25 are particularly affected. Children also suffer, for example when they play with unexploded bombs in the days after the New Year. Accidents involving homemade pyrotechnics are not uncommon. In recent years, there have been several patients who have blown their entire hand off, says Fülling.
To this day, the senior physician is treating a man who lost several fingers to a firecracker in 2024 - but not on New Year's Eve. He had wanted to blow up voles in his garden with ball bombs. He is now being fitted with prostheses. In most cases, severed limbs can be reattached, although the ability to function usually remains limited afterwards.
The best way to perform replantations - the surgical reattachment of amputated limbs or tissue parts - is when you are dealing with a smooth cut without major damage to the tissue, explains Fülling. "That is the ideal case. But tissue is often lost in explosions or burnt on the wound." Sometimes tissue has to be transplanted from other parts of the body.