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J. Oral Maxillofac. Surg. · Dec 2003
Primary management of maxillofacial hard and soft tissue gunshot and shrapnel injuries.
- Mohammad Hosein Kalantar Motamedi.
- Trauma Research Center Faculty, Baqiyatallah Medical Sciences, University, Tehran, Iran. motamedical@lycos.com
- J. Oral Maxillofac. Surg. 2003 Dec 1;61(12):1390-8.
PurposeA 10-year retrospective study was undertaken of all patients treated for facial gunshot and shrapnel wounds at our medical center to evaluate the outcomes and assess the results of simultaneous management to treat the hard and soft tissue injuries primarily.Patients And MethodsA total of 44 patients were treated. Medical documentation of the patients was compiled. All maxillofacial gunshot, shrapnel, and warfare injuries were treated by the oral and maxillofacial surgeon. Other concomitant bodily injuries were treated by pertinent consultant specialists. Patients ranged in age from 8 to 53 years, with a mean age of 24.7 years. Maxillofacial hard and soft tissue injuries were treated definitively in the first operation except when gross contamination, infection, extensive comminution, or general condition precluded this.ResultsThere were 2 shotgun, 28 bullet, 10 shrapnel, 3 land mine, and 1 breech block injuries. Overall postadmission mortality in this series was 2.2%. Of the 97.7% of the patients who had an injury to the underlying craniofacial skeleton, all required surgical intervention. The soft tissue and underlying bony injuries were addressed concomitantly (in a single stage at the time of primary surgical debridement) in 86.3% of the patients. Nine percent of the patients had a tracheostomy emergently for management of the airway, 6.8% had an intracranial injury, and 2.2% of them required neurosurgery. In the series, 4.5% of the patients had neck wounds that required exploration. Comprehensive treatment was rendered in 1 to 3 major operations (average, 1.5).ConclusionAll patients in this series required surgical intervention for treatment of their facial gunshot wounds. Primary treatment of hard and soft tissue injuries of the face at the time of surgical debridement was possible in the majority of our patients. This minimized the number of admissions and did not bear a higher complication rate than other reported series that advocate multiple staged operations to treat such injuries despite the fact that, in our series, flaps were also mobilized for wound closure in the primary phase.
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