Man survives awkward impalement

PHOENIX  — An 86-year-old Arizona man whose eye socket was impaled with a pair of pruning shears said Tuesday he experienced excruciating pain during the ordeal and feels lucky to be alive.

Leroy Luetscher, a Wisconsin native who now lives in Green Valley in southern Arizona, said he had just finished trimming plants in his backyard on July 30 when he lost his balance and fell on the pruning shears.

The tool went into his right eye socket and down into his neck, resting against the carotid artery. Half the shears were left in his head pushing up against his eye, while the other half was sticking out.

Luetscher said he put his hand to his face and realized the shears had gone into his eye.

“I didn’t know if my eyeball was still there or what,” he said. “I never had pain like that in all my life.”

Luetscher, whose face was gushing blood, was able to walk to the laundry room of his house and beckon his longtime live-in girlfriend, Arpy Williams, who called 911.

An ambulance rushed him to University Medical Center in Tucson, where a team of surgeons immediately took scans of his brain and came up with a plan to treat him.

“It was a bit overwhelming,” said Dr. Lynn Polonski, one of Luetscher’s surgeons. “It was wedged in there so tightly, you could not move it. It was part of his face.”

Polonski said the team made incisions underneath his right upper lip and his sinus wall, allowing them to loosen the handle of the pruning shears with their fingers. “Once we were able to loosen it up, it went fairly easily,” he said.

Doctors also rebuilt Luetscher’s orbital floor with a titanium plate and put him on antibiotics for 20 days to stave off an infection that could have proved fatal.

Luetscher still has slight swelling in his eyelids and minor double vision but has otherwise recovered.

Polonski said so many things could have gone much worse for Luetscher.

The shears could have ruptured his eye ball, hit his brain or severed his carotid artery.

“You know, if it went a little bit in a different direction, it basically could have killed him or he could have had a stroke,” Polonski said. “He’s was very lucky that it missed all vital structures and we were basically able to put him back together.”

Polonski said he’s never seen anything like Luetscher’s injury in his 13 years as a surgeon.

Luetscher said he was born and raised about 30 miles outside Madison, Wis., and worked as an executive in the dairy industry before retiring to Arizona in 1998.

He said he’s not sure he’ll be doing much more gardening in the future.

“If that instrument had gone in any direction different than it did, I would have bled right there to death,” he said.

SportsPlus

Mower County

Photos: Singing the song of the season

Mower County

Driver in crash that injured Wyatt Hamlin arrested in Tennessee

Mower County

UPDATE: Thursday brings another chance for snow, winter weather advisory issued

Brownsdale

Alamo Annie’s in Brownsdale closing

News

Government funding plan collapses as Trump makes new demands days before shutdown

Mower County

‘It’s Love’: Nativity display grows, reflects the hope of the holidays

Local Government

County Board passes new cannabis ordinance

Mower County

Minnesota DNR shares reminders about the snowmobile riding season

News

Minnesota man gets life without parole for killing girlfriend who was the subject of a 69-day search

Mower County

Institute Scientists publish paper revealing first atomic-resolution of parvovirus of humans

Mower County

In Your Community: Early Riser’s Kiwanis Club donates to Masons

Mower County

In Your Community: Shriners install officers

Education

Education Briefs

Local Government

City Council approves levy increase of 11.97% for 2025

Mower County

Commissioners hold Truth in Taxation meeting, levy increase at 4.99%

News

5 dead, others injured in a shooting at a private Christian school in Wisconsin

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Austin man accused of possessing and disseminating child pornography

Mower County

Photos: The holidays ring during Christmas in the County

Business

Right at home: Edward Jones branch celebrates new location on Oakland Avenue

Mower County

Mower woman tells story of avoided scam, warns others to beware

Mower County

Sheriff Sandvik completes the National Sheriffs’ Institute’s Leadership Development Course

News

Minnesota special education costs climbing rapidly as more students qualify for services

Mower County

In Your Community: Duplicate Bridge

Mower County

In Your Community: Mower County Senior Center