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East and Central African Journal of Surgery
Association of Surgeons of East Africa and College of Surgeons of East Central and Southern Africa
ISSN: 1024-297X EISSN: 1024-297X
Vol. 14, No. 1, 2009, pp. 57-63
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Bioline Code: js09009
Full paper language: English
Document type: Research Article
Document available free of charge
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East and Central African Journal of Surgery, Vol. 14, No. 1, 2009, pp. 57-63
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Head Injury at a Tertiary Referral Centre in the Eastern Region of Nepal.
Agrawal, A.; Agrawal, C.S.; Kumar, A.; Lewis, O.; Malla, G. & Chalise, P.
Abstract
Background:
The purpose of this epidemiologic study was to determine the pattern and characteristics of head injuries and to establish an epidemiologic data bank for designing preventive strategies for head injuries in the eastern region of Nepal.
Patients and Methods:
This retrospective review was done at B.P.Koirala institute of Health Sciences, Dharan, Nepal. All the patients with head injury admitted to the Department of Surgery between the periods January 2005 to December 2005 were included in the study.
Results:
The study population consisted of 334 patients who sustained head injuries. Their ages ranged from 1 to 88 with a mean age of 28.53 years. The majority (66.3%), were young adults in the 2nd to 5th decades The male to female sex ratio was 2.6:1. Road traffic crushes were the most common cause (43.4%) followed by fall from heights (30.8%). X-ray of skull showed lesions in 114 cases (49.8%) such as depressed fracture (11.4%) and linear fracture (24.0%). Common lesions on CT scan included cerebral contusion (21.6%), extradural haematoma (20.9%), linear fracture (23.8%), subarachnoid haemorrhage (18.5%) and pnemocephalus (11.2%). Forty patients (12.0%) sustained moderate head injury. There were 15 deaths. One patient had associated intra-abdominal injury (splenic rupture) and two patient sustained pulmonary trauma and succumbed to haemothorax and aspiration.
Conclusion:
A clearer understanding of the patterns of head injuries will assist health care providers to plan and manage the treatment of traumatic facial injuries. Such epidemiological information can also be used to guide the future funding of public health programs geared toward prevention.
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© Copyright 2009 - East and Central African Journal of Surgery
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