keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38636901/recovery-of-vision-in-open-globe-injury-patients-with-initial-no-light-perception-vision
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Noha A Sherif, Sandra Hoyek, Karen Wai, Kevin G Makhoul, Racquel Bitar, Marisa Teiger, Alice C Lorch, Nimesh A Patel, Grayson W Armstrong
OBJECTIVE OR PURPOSE: To identify clinical characteristics of injured eyes associated with visual recovery in patients with open globe injuries (OGI) and presenting with no light perception (NLP) vision. DESIGN: Retrospective chart review. SUBJECTS, PARTICIPANTS, AND/OR CONTROLS: All patients presenting to Massachusetts Eye and Ear with OGI and NLP vision from January 1999 to March 2022. METHODS, INTERVENTION, OR TESTING: Manual data extraction to collect patient demographic characteristics, pre-operative, intraoperative, and post-operative characteristics of OGI injury, laceration versus rupture, history of intraocular surgery, time from injury to repair, timing of vitrectomy, lensectomy, choroidal drainage, and silicone oil placement, visual acuity (VA) at last follow-up, and subsequent B-scan ultrasound findings of retinal detachment, choroidal hemorrhage, vitreous hemorrhage, and disorganized intraocular contents...
April 16, 2024: Ophthalmology Retina
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38483274/epidemiology-of-craniofacial-injuries-from-exercise-and-weightlifting-a-10-year-analysis
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rohan Mangal, Dylan Treger, Anjali Daniel, Soumil Prasad, Matthew T Gompels, Seth R Thaller
INTRODUCTION: Exercise is the cornerstone of a healthy lifestyle. It is recognized for enhancing cardiovascular health and bolstering mental well-being. While the fitness industry grows, the incidence of exercise-related injuries continues to rise. This study examines craniofacial injuries resulting from exercise and weightlifting over the past decade. The goal is to uncover trends, demographics, diagnoses, and patient dispositions. METHODS AND MATERIALS: A retrospective review was conducted using the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System database...
March 14, 2024: Journal of Craniofacial Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38011636/jumping-trends-in-trampoline-related-craniofacial-injuries
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew T Gompels, Dylan Treger, Rohan Mangal, Soumil Prasad, Seth R Thaller
INTRODUCTION: In 1990, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended the sale of trampolines cease in the United States. The risk of traumatic injury is well-documented, yet trampolines remain a growing source of recreation. Trampoline parks, in particular, are becoming a common entertainment attraction that can result in serious injury. There is currently a paucity of literature characterizing craniofacial injuries from trampoline use and plans to prevent these injuries. METHODS AND MATERIALS: A retrospective review of the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System was conducted to analyze emergency department visits for trampoline-related craniofacial injuries in 1 to 20 year olds between 2013 and 2022...
November 24, 2023: Journal of Craniofacial Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37567828/management-of-soft-tissue-injuries-in-children-a-comprehensive-review
#4
REVIEW
Marcus Hwang, Mark Engelstad, Srinivasa Rama Chandra
Airway injury, Ocular injury and neurovascular tissue damage, burns is all a spectrum of pediatric soft tissue injury complex. Soft tissue injuries to the head and neck area in children are challenging to manage, because these injuries significantly affect the child's overall health and development. Management of such injuries requires a multidisciplinary approach involving surgical and nonsurgical interventions and close collaboration among health care professionals, parents, and caregivers. This article reviews the various causes of injuries, specific considerations for each region of the head and neck, and approaches to the surgical management of soft tissue injuries in pediatric patients, including surgical and adjuvant therapies...
August 9, 2023: Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37559553/headguard-use-in-combat-sports-position-statement-of-the-association-of-ringside-physicians
#5
REVIEW
Kevin deWeber, Lindsay Parlee, Alexander Nguyen, Michael W Lenihan, Leah Goedecke
Headguard use is appropriate during some combat sports activities where the risks of injury to the face and ears are elevated. Headguards are highly effective in reducing the incidence of facial lacerations in studies of amateur boxers and are just as effective in other striking sports. They should be used in scenarios - especially sparring prior to competitions - where avoidance of laceration and subsequent exposure to potential blood-borne pathogens is important. Headguards are appropriate where avoidance of auricular injury is deemed important; limited data show a marked reduction in incidence of auricular injury in wrestlers wearing headguards...
August 28, 2023: Physician and Sportsmedicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37182069/a-rare-presentation-of-donkey-bites-involving-the-cheek-and-ear-a-case-report-and-literature-review
#6
Nancy Zeaiter, Deoda Maassarani, Charbel B Aoun, George Ghanime, Ziad Sleiman
Although animal bites account for a fair number of emergency department visits, donkey bites account for a very limited proportion. A 12-year-old boy presented to our department with a severe donkey bite involving his face. The injury included his left cheek with a laceration of the left ear cartilage. The examination revealed no serious morbidity (no vascular or nerve involvement). The patient received prophylactic antibiotics and anti-rabies/anti-tetanus vaccination. The wound was cleaned thoroughly with copious irrigation...
April 2023: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37101322/a-characterization-of-pediatric-craniofacial-injuries-from-children-s-toys
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dylan Treger, Ethan Plotsker, Seth R Thaller
INTRODUCTION: Playing with toys contributes significantly to the cognitive, physical, and social development of children. Certain toys, unfortunately, carry the potential for serious craniofacial injury. There is a gap in the literature regarding the comprehensive assessment of toy-related craniofacial injuries. By studying mechanisms of injury and ensuing trauma, our goal is to encourage innovative design and educate caregivers, health care workers, and the Consumer Product Safety Commission on risk mitigation and prevention...
April 27, 2023: Journal of Craniofacial Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36637022/extensive-tongue-laceration-in-an-edentulous-infant-is-it-child-abuse
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeffrey D Bernstein, Sara Kruczek, Natalie Laub, Daniela Carvalho
It is important for medical providers to distinguish between accidental and abusive mechanisms of injury in children. In the absence of a serious trauma, an isolated tongue laceration and oromaxillofacial trauma in a young, edentulous infant raises significant concern for abuse. The presented case demonstrates a unique injury pattern and serves as an opportunity to explore the multidisciplinary approach to infant trauma in Otolaryngology. Presented is an edentulous infant who sustained a deep splitting laceration of the oral tongue as a result of being dropped a short distance onto carpeted floor...
January 13, 2023: Ear, Nose, & Throat Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36574225/an-analysis-of-head-and-neck-surgical-workload-during-recent-combat-operations-from-2002-to-2016
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Caryn A Stern, Jacob J Glaser, Zsolt T Stockinger, Jennifer M Gurney
INTRODUCTION: In battle-injured U.S. service members, head and neck (H&N) injuries have been documented in 29% who were treated for wounds in deployed locations and 21% who were evacuated to a Role 4 MTF. The purpose of this study is to examine the H&N surgical workload at deployed U.S. military facilities in Iraq and Afghanistan in order to inform training, needed proficiency, and MTF manning. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective analysis of the DoD Trauma Registry was performed for all Role 2 and Role 3 MTFs, from January 2002 to May 2016; 385 ICD-9 CM procedure codes were identified as H&N surgical procedures and were stratified into eight categories...
December 27, 2022: Military Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36543944/effect-of-time-to-operative-repair-within-twenty-four-hours-on-visual-acuity-outcomes-for-open-globe-injuries
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kevin G Makhoul, Racquel A Bitar, Grayson W Armstrong, Marguerite C Weinert, Alexander Ivanov, Francesca Kahale, Thong Ta, Alice C Lorch
PURPOSE: Convention is to perform open globe injury (OGI) repair within 24 h to minimize risk of endophthalmitis. However, there are limited data assessing how time to operative repair (OR) within 24 h impacts postoperative visual acuity (VA). METHODS: Manual retrospective chart review of 633 eyes at Massachusetts Eye and Ear (MEE) with a diagnosis of OGI between 2012 and 2022. Inclusion criteria were primary repair ≤ 24 h after injury and ≥1 month follow-up...
December 21, 2022: Eye
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36057975/keloids-in-darkly-pigmented-skin-clinical-pattern-and-presentation-at-a-tertiary-health-facility-southwest-nigeria
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A G Alo, A O Akinboro, A A Ajani, F O Olanrewaju, M M Oripelaye, O A Olasode
BACKGROUND: Keloids are chronic dermal fibro-proliferative disorders resulting from excessive collagen deposition. Although it is commonly seen in the dark skin, it occurs in other races. It is a disfiguring dermatosis whose epidemiology and clinical pattern should be put into proper perspective in an area where it has not been extensively documented. SUBJECTS AND METHOD: A cross-sectional design that included 120 consenting keloids patients was made at the dermatology and plastic surgery clinics of a tertiary hospital over one year...
August 31, 2022: West African Journal of Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36032865/a-study-of-otological-manifestations-of-temporal-bone-fractures
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
B K Prasad, A Basu, P K Sahu, A K Rai
The aim of study was to evaluate various otological manifestations of temporal bone fractures and to suggest their management. This prospective observational study was conducted in a tertiary care hospital of Armed Forces over 2.5 years in 57 cases of temporal bone fracture in patients of age group of 12-59 yrs comprising 49 males and 8 females. Radioimaging was done for diagnosing the fracture, mapping its extent and for clinical correlation. Hearing was assessed by tuning forks, free field hearing and pure tone audiogram as per the fitness of patient...
August 2022: Indian Journal of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35859271/surfing-related-craniofacial-injuries-a-neiss-database-study
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ethan G Muhonen, Samipya Kafle, Sina J Torabi, Eric H Abello, Benjamin F Bitner, Nguyen Pham
INTRODUCTION: Surfing is a popular pastime in coastal areas around the world with increasing numbers of participants. There is a lack of detailed data in the literature regarding surfing-related head and neck (HN) injuries. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We queried the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) database to characterize patient demographics, injury types, injury subsite, and emergency department (ED) disposition status associated with surfing-related HN injuries between 2009 and 2020 in the United States...
July 21, 2022: Journal of Craniofacial Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35633768/slippery-slopes-skiing-related-facial-trauma-in-adults
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alissa C Galgano, Jason E Cohn, Jordan J Licata, Sammy Othman, Fred J Stucker, Paige Bundrick
Study Design: Retrospective, observational, cross-sectional study. Objective: To determine the incidence of skiing-related facial trauma and to identify their patterns in terms of potential risk factors, mechanism of injury, anatomical location, and degree of severity. Methods: Data was collected using the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System and included snow skiing-related incidents during the years 2009 to 2018. Specifically, injuries limited to the facial region including the head, face, eye(s), mouth, neck or ear(s) were reported...
June 2022: Craniomaxillofacial Trauma & Reconstruction
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35468645/-management-of-the-partial-avulsions-of-the-auricle
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jamal Huseynov, Boris Haxel, Miloš Fischer, Iris-Susanne Fischer
Injuries of the auricle can range from simple lacerations to complete avulsions. Many techniques of ear replantation have been described in the literature in addition to the type and extent of the involved auricular structures. A direct reattachment of the amputated pinna without microsurgery is rarely successful due to necrosis of the avulsed fragment. Whereas, reconstructions with pocket methods and their variations might lead to better results. In this article we would like to discuss some of these approaches and demonstrate a two-stage reconstruction technique for subtotal avulsion of the auricle...
August 2022: Laryngo- Rhino- Otologie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35428516/facial-trauma-education-within-two-english-medical-schools
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Umar Rehman, Mohammad Sohaib Sarwar, Umar Shafiq, Peter A Brennan
Facial trauma accounts for 5%-10% of all presentations to emergency departments (ED) in the UK, and it is often referred to the oral and maxillofacial surgery (OMFS) department by ED physicians. Undergraduate medical students often have limited exposure to OMFS, and this is likely to translate to reduced exposure to facial trauma. We investigated the exposure of undergraduate clinical medical students to facial trauma teaching and asked about their confidence to manage facial lacerations and their ability to diagnose common facial fractures...
July 2022: British Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34856545/the-dorsal-skinfold-chamber-as-a-new-tympanic-membrane-wound-healing-model-intravital-insights-into-the-pathophysiology-of-epithelialized-wounds
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Strüder, Christoph Lachmann, Sara Maria van Bonn, Eberhard Grambow, Sebastian P Schraven, Robert Mlynski, Brigitte Vollmar
BACKGROUND: Tympanic membrane perforations (TMPs) are a common complication of trauma and infection. Persisting perforations result from the unique location of the tympanic membrane. The wound is surrounded by air of the middle ear and the external auditory canal. The inadequate wound bed, growth factor, and blood supply lead to circular epithelialization of the perforation's edge and premature interruption of defect closure. Orthotopic animal models use mechanical or chemical tympanic membrane laceration to identify bioactive wound dressings and overcome premature epithelialization...
December 2, 2021: European Surgical Research. Europäische Chirurgische Forschung. Recherches Chirurgicales Européennes
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34632337/a-worthy-technique-for-transcanal-drilling-during-endoscopic-ear-surgery
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sheikh Shawkat Kamal
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the necessity and effectiveness of a preplanned technique for drilling during transcanal endoscopic ear surgery. METHODS: Study design : Retrospective case series study from June 2011 to June 2015. Setting: Private tertiary care hospital. Patients: Eighty-five ears of 78 patients, age ranging from 9 to 57 years underwent transcanal endoscopic drilling for various types of pathology in their middle and external ear. Interventions : Application of a preplanned technique for transcanal drilling in endoscopic ear surgery that involved short timed drilling with use of intermittent irrigation and suction...
October 2021: World Journal of Otorhinolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34523039/be-careful-where-you-aim-craniomaxillofacial-trauma-from-the-utility-of-metal-hammers
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dani Stanbouly, Rami Stanbouly, Kevin C Lee, Bridget Ferguson
PURPOSE: A hammer is a popular tool among the "do it yourself" (DIY) population who pursue home-improvement projects. While we are aware that hammers have health hazards, no study has yet to explore the craniomaxillofacial injuries that could arise from the use of hammers. The purpose of this study is to describe the characteristics of craniomaxillofacial injuries from hammers. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is a 20-year cross-sectional study conducted using the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS)...
September 2022: Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34493559/undiagnosed-pharyngeal-perforation-following-a-penetrating-neck-trauma-in-a-5-year-old-child-a-proposed-treatment-algorithm
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sauradeep Das, Jijitha Lakshmanan, Arun Alexander, Rashmi Hansdah
External penetrating wounds of the neck leading to pharyngeal perforations are relatively uncommon. The small area of the neck contains the vital vascular, aerodigestive and nervous structures, which are difficult to access surgically. Pharyngeal perforations are challenging to treat, especially in children, as primary wound inspection may be difficult, leading to life-threatening complications like retropharyngeal abscesses, mediastinitis or airway compromise. The following is a case report of a 5-year-old girl who had a road traffic accident causing a neck laceration with a pharyngeal tear, which was only identified during emergency neck exploration in the operating room...
September 7, 2021: BMJ Case Reports
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