WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
Fishhook Injuries
Topic Overview
Even if you fish carefully, you may get a fishhook in your skin. Fishhook injuries often occur when you remove a slippery, flopping fish from your line. Injury may also occur when you are casting a line, from another person casting a line, or if you walk barefoot near fishing gear. The chance of a fishhook injury increases if you are not familiar with fishing gear.
Most fishhook injuries puncture the skin of the face, scalp, fingers, back, or ears. Home treatment can help you remove a fishhook that is not too deep. It is important to clean the puncture wound well to help prevent infection.
A fishhook can cause other problems if it enters the eye, muscles, tendons, ligaments, or bones. A fishhook injury is more serious when:
- A fishhook is in or near an eye. Be sure to know first aid for a fishhook in or near the eye.
- A barb cannot be removed using home treatment.
- Bleeding
is
severe or cannot be stopped. - The wound is big enough to need stitches.
- Blood vessels, nerves,
tendons,
ligaments,
joints, or bones are injured. Injuries to these areas
may cause:
- Numbness or tingling.
- Pale, white, blue, or cold skin.
- Decreased ability to move the area.
- Signs of infection develop, such as redness, swelling, or pus. A puncture from a fishhook is often dirty from marine bacteria, which increases the chance of a skin infection.
- Your tetanus immunization is not current.
Use the Check Your Symptoms section to decide if and when you should see a doctor.
Last Updated:
May 20, 2009- Author:
- Jan Nissl, RN, BS
- Medical Review:
- William M. Green, MD - Emergency Medicine
Steven L. Schneider, MD - Family Medicine
H. Michael O'Connor, MD - Emergency Medicine
Adam Husney, MD - Family Medicine
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