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Dento‐alveolar and maxillofacial injuries: a 5‐year multi‐center study. Part 2: Severity and location
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Citations
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2007
Year
Maxillofacial TraumaSurgeryInjury PreventionCraniomaxillofacial TraumaOrthopaedic SurgeryFacial TraumaDental TraumaFacial InjuriesMaxillofacial SurgeryHealth SciencesPart 1Multi‐center StudyMaxillofacial InjuriesOcclusionCraniomaxillofacial Trauma SurgeryPart 2Patient SafetyDentoalveolar SurgeryMedicineEmergency Medicine
Maxillofacial and dental injuries are not uncommon. These injuries may cause morbidity and demand meticulously planned treatment. Part 1 of this study focused on the incidence of general trauma injuries, as well as facial or dental trauma. The aim of part 2 is to evaluate the severity and location of the dento-alveolar and maxillofacial injuries over 5 years. A retrospective cohort study was conducted based on data from the Israel National Trauma Registry. Patients admitted and hospitalized due to trauma injuries during the years 2000-2004, totaled 111,010 in which 5886 (5.3%) were maxillofacial or dental injuries. Most of these injuries were traffic-related (54.5%), followed by events at home (18.7%). Facial injuries combined with injuries to other organs involved occurred in 3721 (63.2%) of the patients. Most minor injuries were noted when no other organs were involved, while severe injuries were more common when multiple organs were involved. More than 25% of facial injuries required surgery. Meticulous epidemiologic studies are needed to support the leading role, extent, and severity of maxillofacial trauma.
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