Maxillofacial Injuries Due to Traffic Accidents
- PMID: 30829886
- DOI: 10.1097/SCS.0000000000005158
Maxillofacial Injuries Due to Traffic Accidents
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this retrospective study was to analyze the epidemiology, patterns, and management of maxillofacial due to road traffic accidents over a 17-year period.
Methods: Between January 2001 and December 2017, 2924 patients with maxillofacial fractures were admitted to the Division of Maxillofacial Surgery, Turin, Italy.The following data were analyzed: age, gender, data of the trauma, alcohol and drug abuse, mechanism of injury, fracture site, facial injury severity scale, associated injuries, type of treatment, and length of hospital stay.
Results: Of the 605 patients included in the study, 419 were male and 186 were female (ratio, 2.2:1). The most common mechanism of injury was car accidents (62.6%).More than half of the patients had fractures of the middle third of the maxillofacial skeleton.Associated injuries were detected in 172 (45.5%) patients. In total 5.3% of patients did not undergo surgery. The average hospital stay was 7.3 days.
Conclusions: This study shows an important reduction in maxillofacial fractures following road traffic accidents since the turn of the new millennium. At least in north-western Italy, road safety policies implemented in the last 30 years seem to have affected the behavior of motorists and motorcyclists.
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