In September 2022, an 18-year-old laborer in India died after a heavy metal object struck his forehead at work, causing a rare and deadly spinal injury. As reported in the *Journal of Orthopaedic Case Reports*, he became unconscious immediately and suffered respiratory failure. Despite emergency treatment, he died within 48 hours.
CT scans showed that his C5 vertebra was “retropulsed”—crushed and pushed backward into the spinal canal—while C6 also fractured. Oddly, his facet joints and pedicles remained intact, forming a “nutcracker-like” compression that severely injured his spinal cord.
Doctors were baffled because the injury didn’t match any known classification systems like Allen & Ferguson, SLIC-S, or AO Spine. “This injury defies current classification,” the report noted, revealing a gap in current diagnostic tools.
Biomechanically, the vertical force from the frontal impact transmitted down the spine, crushing C5 in a way rarely seen in spinal trauma. It wasn’t a typical side-impact or hyperflexion injury.
This tragic case highlights the urgent need for stricter workplace safety. “Even brief lapses… can have fatal consequences,” the report warned. It calls for better safety protocols and improved injury classification systems to prepare for rare but deadly accidents.