News

Las Vegas native survives pipe through head thanks to doctors

  • An X-ray shows the metal pole sticking through Andrew Linn's mouth and out the back of his neck.

  • Doctors performed a tracheostomy, at right, so he could breathe while they operated to remove the pole.

  • Photo Courtesy Of Linn Family

    Andrew Linn says he feels blessed after surviving a tour with the Marines in Iraq and two auto accidents.

  • John Gurzinski/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Oral surgeon Dr. Jeff Moxley pulled the pipe out of Andrew Linn's body. » Buy this photo

  • Review-Journal File Photo

    Dr. Jay Coates headed the trauma team that worked on Andrew Linn. » Buy this photo

By Paul Harasim
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: May 10, 2011 | 2:13 a.m.
Updated: May 10, 2011 | 6:49 a.m.

The paramedic's radio transmission to the University Medical Center Trauma Center gave Dr. Jay Coates just a hint of what was coming.

"We're bringing in a patient with a foreign object impaled in his mouth."

What wasn't said was that the foreign object was a 2-inch diameter metal pole that had been driven through the man's mouth and out through his neck.

"What the (expletive) am I going to do with this?" Coates remembered saying as he looked at the man sitting before him with 4 to 6 inches of pole sticking out of his mouth and neck. "I had to form a game plan fast."

Coates looked again at the gruesome pictures of Andrew Linn on Monday morning in the trauma center office. It still boggles the doctor's mind that the 28-year-old Linn was conscious when he was brought in, trying hard to talk with a pipe stuck through his head.

"I had never seen anything like it before," said Coates, the same surgeon who saved magician Roy Horn's life in 2003 after he was dragged offstage by a tiger. "How do you end up surviving a pipe going through your head like this?"

Emergency rescue personnel later would tell Linn that he had driven his car off the pavement near Bonanza Road and Christy Lane and hit a chain-link fence in a homeowner's yard. A pole fastened atop the fence broke through the windshield, went through Linn just below the right side of his nose and ripped out teeth before slamming through the back window.

Rescuers had to cut the pole to get him out of the car and into an ambulance. He couldn't lie down because of the pole, so he sat up on the ride to the hospital and through his initial surgery.

Linn's brush with death in the early morning hours of Nov. 29 will be one of several miraculous stories shared today at UMC's annual trauma survivor's luncheon at Palace Station. Two people who survived lightning strikes also will be on hand.

Though Linn will be there, don't expect the Marine Corps veteran of the Iraq War to be one of the storytellers.

Not because he can't talk, but because he can't remember.

He will thank the UMC medical team -- Coates, oral surgeon Dr. Jeff Moxley and cardiovascular surgeon Dr. Nancy Donahoe -- for saving his life.

Linn, a Las Vegas native, is a business marketing student at Southern Utah University. He and his wife and two children had driven back home for Thanksgiving weekend when the accident happened.

"All I remember is going to bed after a dinner and then waking up in a hospital," he said in a phone interview from his Cedar City, Utah, home. "After seeing the pictures of the pole through my mouth and head that they took at the hospital, I'm glad I don't remember. It really upsets my wife to see those pictures."

He now theorizes that he woke up hungry late at night and drove to get a hamburger.

"I must have fallen asleep at the wheel," he said.

He said that firefighters told him later he wasn't rude as they worked to get him out of the car.

"When they finally got me out of the car, they said I jumped onto the gurney," he said. "They said they told me to be careful, that I might hurt myself. They also said that I took out my phone and was trying to text someone. I was obviously in shock."

Soon after Linn arrived at UMC, Coates had an X-ray done. It showed that the pole had missed Linn's spine. He called in Moxley and Donahoe to help with the case.

"I knew that if Linn made it, he'd need a lot of oral surgery, and I brought in Dr. Donahoe in case we had problems with his carotid artery and jugular vein," he said. "I was worried they might explode when we tried to pull the pipe out and Dr. Donahoe could try to tie them off before he bled to death. "

Before Coates cut Linn open to examine just what internal damage had been done, he had do a tracheostomy: create a hole in the front of Linn's neck and into his windpipe.

Without the tracheostomy, there was no way that a breathing tube could be put into his mouth for an exploratory operation under general anesthesia.

"That metal pole was blocking everything," Coates said.

The tracheostomy was done under local anesthesia.

"I don't remember him complaining or moaning in pain at all that night," Coates said. "The body really has a way of protecting us."

After Coates was assured the tracheostomy allowed Linn to breathe under general anesthesia, he put him out and then made an incision behind his right ear down to the base of his neck.

To his surprise, neither he nor Donahoe found the jugular vein or carotid artery visibly affected by the trauma.

"I couldn't see all of the artery, though, so I was really afraid it might break loose when we pulled it out through the mouth," he said.

It was Moxley's job to pull the pipe out.

Before he began to pull, the back of the pipe behind Linn's head had to be recut.

"There were some really sharp edges from where the rescue workers cut it to get him out of the car," Moxley said. "We were afraid that when we pulled the pipe through his head, it would cut something."

Just before Moxley began to pull on the pipe, Coates remembered that the team looked at one another and the tension level rose. Blood soon could be spewing from Linn's head.

But nothing really happened as Moxley extricated the pipe. The artery and jugular had been pushed aside and compressed.

"In short, all of the bad things that could have happened, didn't," Moxley said.

If the pole had gone in just a fraction of inch differently, Linn would have died.

"People who are in accidents like this go to the morgue, not the emergency room," Moxley said. "It's just a miracle he lived."

Before Moxley sent Linn to intensive care, he repaired a hole in Linn's palate and put in plates and screws to move Linn's broken jaw into proper position. His lip was sutured. Broken teeth were taken out of the back of his neck.

Today, Linn does exercises for his jaw.

"It was wired shut, and I can't open it wide enough right now to get the dentures on my right side," he said. "I hope that will happen in a couple of months along with some cosmetic surgery for my lip."

His right shoulder was badly hurt in the crash and will require surgery within the next three months. Linn spent only two weeks in the hospital after the accident.

His friends try to help him through his recovery with humor.

"I had this one friend ask me whether I was going to the NASCAR race in Las Vegas. And I told him, no. And then he said, 'I was sure you were. I thought you won the pole position.' "

Linn, a devout Mormon, feels sure that the only reason he's alive today is because God has a purpose for him.

In Iraq, he escaped injury from anti-personnel mines and improvised explosive devices as he guarded military convoys.

In 2008, a drunken driver hit him at 75 miles an hour, and he suffered only a neck injury that could be repaired with minor surgery.

"I've been blessed," he said.

Contact reporter Paul Harasim at pharasim@review journal.com or 702-387-2908.

Comments

Registration Notice: The Review-Journal has implemented a new registration procedure that requires all existing and new accounts to validate and login using Facebook. Visit the Registration FAQ for more information.
Terms & Conditions

The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The Review-Journal does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please use the Report Abuse button.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

  1. sassylittlegal May 11, 2011 | 10:48 p.m. Report Abuse

    Well said, eyes.on.u. God's hand was definitely with the inspired doctors!!! And yes, Andy shouldn't stray too far from home for his midnight snacks, LOL...much too accident-prone! (He has some neighbors up the street with a pantry chock-full of anything he could possibly want that he's always welcome to!) As a matter of fact, maybe he should stay home on a permanent basis to avoid any accidents he might possibly find out there :)

  2. eyes.on.u May 11, 2011 | 10:36 p.m. Report Abuse

    @ enigmaman - I think you're missing the point a little. Andy's life was touched by Heavenly Father that night-be it through the trained medical professionals that responded so quickly, or Dr.Coates who made calculated decisions before acting. It's unfortunate people can be so cynical whenever someone takes a very scary and life-threatening situation and turns it into a positive life-changing experience. To my dear friend Andy - next time you want a late-night snack, check the pantry first bud! So grateful you're still here!

  3. sassylittlegal May 11, 2011 | 10:25 p.m. Report Abuse

    I love in Matthew 27 when Jesus is brought before Pilate and the chief judges and is being accused of awful things he did not do, and remains silent, humble, impassive. Pilate asks him, "Hearest thou not how many things they witness against thee?" Translated, "Don't you hear all the AWFUL things they are saying about you!? Aren't you angry!? Don't you want to defend yourself!?" And it tells us that Jesus never uttered a word. I am sure he knew every bad thing about every man there, but it wasn't His practice to condemn. He even asked that his very killers be forgiven, "for they know not what they do." One of my least favorite things is Christians who take it upon themselves to judge other men, other religions, to determine whether they are holy or Christian or worthy of God's love. Judgment is for God and God alone, not for ANY man.

  4. Independent May 11, 2011 | 9:43 a.m. Report Abuse

    "If everyone was right, then who's views and beliefs are wrong? At some point, someone will be wrong."

    Okay, since you're the one asking for a line to be drawn, would you like me to tell you that you are wrong, or would rather I simply respect you for your belief in the Bible and Jesus Christ, two beliefs we have in common, and leave it at that?

  5. Independent May 11, 2011 | 9:37 a.m. Report Abuse

    Rightwinger, as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, It makes no difference to me whether or not you believe me to be a Christian, and it doesn't bother me one bit that my beliefs don't fit with what you believe to be Christianity. I make no apology for my belief that there are a great many things that are good and true that are nowhere to be found in the Bible, and I reject the notion that everything that isn't in the Bible is false prophecy and idolatry. I encourage you to please keep pointing out the differences in our religious beliefs, and I sincerely hope that your own bring you closer to Jesus Christ.

  6. enigmaman May 11, 2011 | 9:12 a.m. Report Abuse

    "Linn, a devout Mormon, feels sure that the only reason he's alive today is because God has a purpose for him."
    I'm glad Linn is OK. But he seems to overlook the role of well-trained EMTs and solid medical care played in his case. These professionals would have done the same thing for anyone else, not just those special ones on a mission from God.

  7. Rightwinger11 May 11, 2011 | 12:40 a.m. Report Abuse

    @sassylittlegal: First of all, it was wrong of me to call Mormonism a cult. However, Mormonism is NOT Christianity. It speaks of other accounts that never occurred in the Bible, and therefore is a false Prophecy and Idolatry. And what you speak of is also Idolatry. God, Buddha, alah etc. That's what you would call "Moral Relativism." what's right for someone else, may not be right for someone else. Well, who's wrong? If everyone was right, then who's views and beliefs are wrong? At some point, someone will be wrong. That's like saying, "2+2=5." Doesn’t work that way. Who is to say that the Radical Muslims who flew 2 737's into the World Trade centers were wrong? They were following what was RIGHT to them, who are we to infringe? It's a slippery slope. You can't say, "It's his faith, it's his god," and then turn around and say that killing in the name of alah is wrong. If you've read the Bible, pick a side. Don't be luke warm, otherwise He will spit you out of His mouth.

  8. sassylittlegal May 10, 2011 | 11:29 p.m. Report Abuse

    Rightwinder, really!?? After someone was just asking what kicks and giggles people get from insulting the beliefs of others? Andy may not be the same religion you believe in, but Mormonism brings him a lot of joy and he is a GOOD Christian person. What I wonder is how many of the people who are throwing insults around here claim to be Christian? Christ wouldn't approve of that! The God I believe in wouldn't make a man get in a car accident as a sign to leave his faith!

  9. sassylittlegal May 10, 2011 | 11:22 p.m. Report Abuse

    Jay, thank you so much for your comment. I couldn't agree more. What kind of kicks and giggles do people get from putting down the beliefs of others? Having any kind of faith that enriches your life or brings you happiness is never a bad thing, whether it be in Allah or God or Buddha or Mother Earth or whatever! Even IF there WERE no God, a favorite quote comes to mind..."which is worse: A lie that draws a smile or a truth that draws a tear?" Along with "If you can't believe, if you can't accept anything on faith, then you're doomed for a life dominated by doubt." Everyone could use a dose of A Miracle on 34th Street, right? Everyone be sure to watch Andy on the Today Show on 5/11.

  10. Rightwinger11 May 10, 2011 | 10:45 p.m. Report Abuse

    What a train wreck! God truly was his savior. But I think it was a sign to leave the Cult "Mormonism." LOL

Read All Comments

Friday, May 25, 2012
Overcast Overcast, 78° Weather Forecast