Pattern of Maxillofacial Injuries in Pediatric Patients – A Hospital Based Retrospective Study

Authors

  • Ravish Mishra UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7368-099X
  • Deepak Yadav UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal
  • Laxmi Kandel UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal
  • Shashank Tripathi UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal
  • Bikash Pahari UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal
  • Snigdha Shubham UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal
  • Narayan Gautam UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/bjhs.v5i3.33700

Keywords:

Mandible, maxillofacial Injuries, pediatric, retrospective studies

Abstract

Introduction: Maxillofacial injuries are less frequent in children than adults and are more often minimally displaced. Literature reveals that the incidence of maxillofacial injuries accounts for 1% - 14.7% in children below age 16 years. There is lack of information on epidemiological data for pediatric maxillofacial injury from Nepal.

Objectives:  The objective of the study is to determine the pattern of maxillofacial injuries in the pediatric population who had been treated in one of the tertiary level hospitals in western Nepal.

Methodology: Among 303 cases of maxillofacial trauma registered between March 2017 to February 2019 at UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Bhairahawa, Rupandehi, Nepal; 57 cases of pediatric maxillofacial injuries that were admitted and received treatment were enrolled in the study. Parameters recorded were demographic data, mode of injury, the pattern of maxillofacial injuries and treatment provided.

Results: Majority of patients were males (66.67%) among which 51% were adolescents (12-16 years). The mode of injury was road traffic accidents (77.2%) in most cases. Mandibular fractures were commonly seen in which parasymphysis region (40%) was common anatomic site. Most of the injured patients (45.6%) were managed with open reduction and internal fixation. Post-operative results were uneventful.

Conclusion: The road traffic accident was the predominant mode for injury. Mandible is one of the most commonly involved bones to get a fracture. Good traffic sense needs to be imbibed and developed by the government as well as the public to prevent road traffic accidents. In addition, children need to carry out their outdoor activities under adult supervision.

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Author Biographies

Ravish Mishra, UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal

Lecturer, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

Deepak Yadav, UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal

Lecturer, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

Laxmi Kandel, UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal

Lecturer, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

Shashank Tripathi, UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal

Lecturer, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

Bikash Pahari, UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal

Resident, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

Snigdha Shubham, UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal

Lecturer, Department of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics

Narayan Gautam, UCMS College of Dental Surgery, Nepal

Associate Professor, Department of Biochemistry

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Published

2020-12-30

How to Cite

Mishra, R., Yadav, D., Kandel, L., Tripathi, S., Pahari, B., Shubham, S., & Gautam, N. (2020). Pattern of Maxillofacial Injuries in Pediatric Patients – A Hospital Based Retrospective Study. Birat Journal of Health Sciences, 5(3), 1210–1214. https://doi.org/10.3126/bjhs.v5i3.33700

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Section

Original Research Articles