Hair-thread tourniquet syndrome is a rare condition that occurs mostly in babies. It occurs when a strand of hair or occasionally a piece of thread or fiber encircles an appendage, causing partial or total obstruction to circulation.

Postoperative patient was doing well voiding urine without difficulty. The Social worker was involved to rule out child abuse but no definite data collected from the family pointing any social problem. The patient was discharge home first postoperative day and Follow up appointment after two weeks given to the patient but the patient didn’t show at follow up.

Figure 2: Intraoperative finding of hair Constriction ring: Upper picture is the before and lower picture after hair removal it is 6 cm long, faint yellow in color

Our impression at that time was foreign body; a burred hair-thread strangulating the glans, putting in our mind possibility of child abuse. Child was urgently taken to theatre; Examination Under general anesthesia shows a Constriction ring of hair-thread like fibers at the glans penis sulcus and was removed with a pair of fine scissors {Fig 2}

4 years and 6 months old boy who is previously healthy with no previous surgery except circumcision under local anesthesia at age of 7 days, presented to emergency department with irritability during voiding urine for the last two weeks and mild penile swelling and coronal sulcus ulcer with crustation in the last 2 days. He has a history of nocturnal enuresis but No history of trauma, foreign body, and allergy. On examination, the patient was irritable, in pain, there is mild distal penile swelling, and erythematic and tender circumferential constriction linear fissure at coronal sulcus and foreign body cannot see. {Fig 1}

Discussion

Hair tourniquet syndrome is characterized by circumferential strangulation of an appendages or genitalia by human hairs or fibers. The condition first described in 1832 and Quinn is the first coined the term hair tourniquet syndrome in 1971. [ 2 ]

According to Saad et al; there were reviewed a total of 210 reported cases and they found that penile involvement occurred in 44.2%, toes in 40.4%, fingers in 8.57%, and other sites (female external genitalia, uvula, and neck) in 6.83% of cases. Penile tourniquet is more common in patients around 2 years old. [ 3 ]

Hair remains the most common causative agent with a reported incidence of 79% in one study. Hair has unique physical characteristics that make it an ideal tourniquet. It is thin, elastic and expansible when wet while constricts as it dries off without losing its tensile strength. [ 2 ]

Delayed diagnosis may result in loss of appendages in some cases. [ 3 ] In our case, the patient presented late because he treated for 2 weeks as a case of acute balanitis. Early recognition of this condition is important and requires a high index of suspicion when no other causes found in an irritable infant.

Haddad, in his detailed review of penile strangulation, has divided the etiology into 4 groups. They are accidental, incidental, intentional, and undetermined cause. He also mentions circumcision as a predisposing factor as a hair is more easily entangled around a circumcised penis than around a glans covered by an intact prepuce. [ 3 ]

Our patient has nocturnal enuresis and he is 4 year and 6 month old; some instances of penile wrapping for control of nocturnal enuresis have reported. [ 4 ]