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Abdominal injuries in olabisi onabanjo university teaching Hospital Sagamu, Nigeria: Pattern and outcome
Ayoade, B. A; Salami, B. A; Tade, A. O; Musa, A. A; Olawoye, O. A.
  • Ayoade, B. A; s.af
  • Salami, B. A; s.af
  • Tade, A. O; s.af
  • Musa, A. A; s.af
  • Olawoye, O. A; s.af
Artigo em Inglês | AIM | ID: biblio-1267871
ABSTRACT

Objective:

The aim was to study the pattern and outcome of abdominal trauma managed by Laparotomy in Olabisi Onabanjo University teaching Hospital Sagamu (OOUTH), South Western Nigeria.

Method:

This is a retrospective study. The records of the patients were retrieved and relevant data extracted such as age, sex, occupation, address, cause of injury, vital signs on admission, abdominal signs, other injuries, number of units of blood transfused, investigations, indications for surgery, operative findings, procedure carried out, complications and outcome.

Results:

Seventy seven subjects were reviewed. There were 23 females (29.9%), and 54 males (70.1%). The age range was 3years to 68years, 32 patients (41.6%) were in 20-30 years age group. The mechanism of injury was blunt trauma in 61 (79.2%) and penetrating injury in 16 patients (20.8%). Road traffic accident was the commonest cause of injury, in 53 patients (68.8%). 42 patients (54.5%) had extra abdominal injuries. Positive paracentesis abdominis was the commonest indication for surgery, in 53 patients (68.8%). The spleen was the most commonly injured organ, in 31 patients (40.2%) while the organs were normal in 4 patients (5.2%). The complication observed includes acute renal failure, in 5 patients (6.5%), multiple organ failure in 5 patients, and wound infection in 8 patients (10.4%). Ten patients died. (13%)

Conclusion:

Splenic rupture is the most common abdominal injury treated by Laparotomy in OOUTH Sagamu and the commonest cause is road traffic accident. Mortality was due mainly to acute renal failure and multiple organ failure
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Índice: AIM (África) Assunto principal: Traumatismos Abdominais / Laparotomia / Nigéria Tipo de estudo: Estudo observacional País/Região como assunto: África Idioma: Inglês Revista: Nigerian Journal of Othopedics And Trauma Ano de publicação: 2006 Tipo de documento: Artigo

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Índice: AIM (África) Assunto principal: Traumatismos Abdominais / Laparotomia / Nigéria Tipo de estudo: Estudo observacional País/Região como assunto: África Idioma: Inglês Revista: Nigerian Journal of Othopedics And Trauma Ano de publicação: 2006 Tipo de documento: Artigo