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Journal Article

Citation

Lu-Ping Z, Rodriguez-Llanes JM, Qi W, van den Oever B, Westman L, Albela M, Liang P, Gao C, De-Sheng Z, Hughes M, von Schreeb J, Guha-Sapir D. Crit. Care 2012; 16(3): R87.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/cc11349

PMID

22594875

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Multiple injuries have been highlighted as an important clinical dimension of the injury profile following earthquakes, but studies are scarce. We investigated the pattern and combination of injuries among patients with two injuries following the 2008 Wenchuan earthquake. We also described the general injury profile, causes of injury, and socio-demographic characteristics of the injured patients. METHODS: A retrospective hospital-based analysis of 1871 earthquake injured patients, totaling 3177 injuries, admitted between 12 and 31 May 2008 to the People's Hospital of Deyang city (PHDC). An electronic, webserver-based database with International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10-based classification of earthquake-related injury diagnoses (IDs), anatomical sites, and additional background variables of the inpatients was used. We analyzed this dataset for injury profile and number of injuries per patient. We then included all patients (856) with two injuries for more in depth analysis. Possible spatial anatomical associations were determined a priori. Cross-tabulation and more complex frequency matrices for combination analyses were used to investigate the injury profile. RESULTS: Out of the 1871 injured patients, 810 (43.3%) presented with a single injury. The rest had multiple injuries, 856 (45.8%) had two, 169 (9.0%) patients had three, 32 (1.7%) presented with four injuries while only 4 (0.2%) were diagnosed with five injuries. The injury diagnoses of patients presenting with two-injuries showed important anatomical intra-site or neighboring clustering, which explained 49.1% of the combinations. For fractures, the result was even more marked as spatial clustering, explaining 57.9% of the association pattern. The most frequent combination of IDs was a double-fracture, affecting 20.7% of the two-injury patients (n=177). Another 108 patients (12.6%) presented with fractures associated with crush injury and organ-soft tissue injury. Of the 3177 injuries, 1476 (46.5%) were fractures. Most injuries were located in the head (22.9%) and lower extremities (30.8%). CONCLUSIONS: Multiple injuries are put forward as an important component of the injury profile after this earthquake. A pattern of injury combinations and spatial aggregation of injuries was also found. Clinical diagnosis and treatment should be adapted to care of these patients. More studies are needed to generalize these findings.


Language: en

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