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1.
Journal of the Korean Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons ; : 303-308, 2010.
Artículo en Coreano | WPRIM | ID: wpr-191902

RESUMEN

Excessive oral and maxillofacial bleeding causes upper airway obstruction, bronchotracheal and gastric aspiration and hypovolemic shock. Therefore, the rapid and correct bleeding control is very important for saving lives in the emergency room. Despite the conventional bleeding control methods of wiring (jaw fracture, wound suture and direct pressure), continuous bleeding can occur due to the presence of various bleeding disorders. There are five main causes for excessive bleeding disorders in the clinical phase; (1) vascular wall alteration (infection, scurvy etc.), (2) disorders of platelet function (3) thrombocytopenic purpura (4) inherited disorders of coagulation, and (5) acquired disorders of coagulation (liver disease, anticoagulant drug etc.). In particular, infections can alter the structure and function of the vascular wall to a point at which the patient may have a clinical bleeding problem due to vessel engorgement and erosion. Wound infection is a frequent cause of postoperative active bleeding. To prevent postoperative bleeding, early infection control using a wound suture with proper drainage establishment is very important, particularly in the active bleeding sites in a contaminated emergency room. This is a case report of a rational bleeding control method by rapid wiring, wound suture with drainage of a rubber strip & iodoform gauze and wet gauze packing, in a 26-year-old male cerebral palsy patient with active oral and maxillofacial bleeding injuries caused by a traffic accident.


Asunto(s)
Adulto , Humanos , Masculino , Obstrucción de las Vías Aéreas , Plaquetas , Parálisis Cerebral , Drenaje , Urgencias Médicas , Glicosaminoglicanos , Hemorragia , Hidrocarburos Yodados , Control de Infecciones , Personas con Discapacidades Mentales , Púrpura Trombocitopénica , Goma , Escorbuto , Choque , Suturas , Infección de Heridas
2.
Journal of the Korean Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons ; : 309-313, 2010.
Artículo en Coreano | WPRIM | ID: wpr-191901

RESUMEN

The management of teeth in the line of a mandibular fracture is controversial despite the general agreement that most of these teeth can be preserved. Teeth should be retained if bony attachments are adequate for survival, the tooth is sound and important in maintaining fixation of the fractured segment of bone. Teeth should be removed if they are loose and interfere with the reduction of fragments, are devitalized and potentially a source of wound infection, are damaged beyond their usefulness or may become devital and interfere with healing by becoming infected. However, tooth removal will increase the level of trauma, extend the severity of the wound and require expensive prosthetic treatment. Therefore, it is very important to conserve infected teeth in the line of a mandibular fracture through early primary endodontic treatment (pulp extirpation, canal enlargement and canal opening drainage) and splinting. The basic principles underlying the treatment of pulpless teeth are those underlying general surgery. Therefore, debridement of the infected wound (pulp extirpation and canal enlargement), drainage (canal opening) and gentle treatment of the tissues (occlusal reduction and teeth splinting) are the principles of surgery. This is a representative case report of conservative care by the early endodontic drainage of infected teeth in the line of a mandibular fracture.


Asunto(s)
Desbridamiento , Drenaje , Fracturas Mandibulares , Diente , Diente no Vital , Infección de Heridas
3.
Journal of the Korean Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons ; : 57-61, 2010.
Artículo en Coreano | WPRIM | ID: wpr-57593

RESUMEN

In the presence of acute pericoronitis of mandilbular third molar, antibiotic therapy and early incision and drainage are the method of choice, followed by definitive surgical extraction of the tooth as soon as it becomes subacute. If excision of the overlying tissues is decided on, it should be done adequately. All overlying tissues must be throughly excised, and the crown portion of the unerupted tooth should be completely exposed. After excision has been completed, the wound should be managed with a surgical dressing. This should be allowed to remain approximately 7 days. And then, surgical extraction of the impacted mandibular third molar can be done usually. In this operation, there are many complications, such as, postoperative bleeding, infection, trismus, dysphasia and paresthesia. The surgeon are discredited and medicolegal problem may be occurred in the presence of many distressed complications. Therefore, the relatively nonsurgical treatment is the method of choice. So, authors selected the conservative treatment methods of incision and drainage, primary endodontic drainage, operculectomy without surgical extraction of the mandibular third molars. The results were more favorable without the postoperative complication in Wonju old offender prison.


Asunto(s)
Humanos , Afasia , Vendajes , Criminales , Coronas , Drenaje , Hemorragia , Control de Infecciones , Tercer Molar , Parestesia , Pericoronitis , Complicaciones Posoperatorias , Prisioneros , Prisiones , Diente , Diente no Erupcionado , Trismo
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