Epidemiology of facial fractures in the elderly

Facial fractures are considered more common in young individuals. However, they are also increasing in the aging population. Investigation of the characteristics of such fractures is important so as to be able to devise preventive measures and specifications for their proper treatment. We carried ou...

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Main Authors: Sandrine Vlavonou, Tan Mai Nguyen, Gaoussou Touré
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-06-01
Series:JPRAS Open
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352587818300111
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spelling doaj-a2ea95218d524781ba561741733567e02020-11-25T00:59:47ZengElsevierJPRAS Open2352-58782018-06-01168492Epidemiology of facial fractures in the elderlySandrine Vlavonou0Tan Mai Nguyen1Gaoussou Touré2Université Paris Est - Créteil, Service de chirurgie maxillofaciale, CHI, Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, FranceUniversité Paris Est - Créteil, Service de chirurgie maxillofaciale, CHI, Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, FranceCorresponding author. Université Paris Est - Créteil, Service de chirurgie maxillofaciale, CHI, 40 allée de la source, Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, 94195, France.; Université Paris Est - Créteil, Service de chirurgie maxillofaciale, CHI, Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, FranceFacial fractures are considered more common in young individuals. However, they are also increasing in the aging population. Investigation of the characteristics of such fractures is important so as to be able to devise preventive measures and specifications for their proper treatment. We carried out a descriptive retrospective epidemiological study. The information was taken from a database of medical files of patients over 65 years of age in the setting of the emergency ward. Patient information was included for 157 patients aged 65 to 100 years. Two-thirds of the individuals with facial trauma were women. Twenty-eight had a prior history of cognitive impairment. For half of the cases, the trauma occurred at their place of residence, while accidents and falls in public areas were not uncommon. The most frequent site for the fractures was the middle third of the face. These facial fractures were serious in light of their location, as well as the associated skeletal and intracranial lesions. The number of such fractures can be expected to increase with time. Their hospital cost is higher than with younger individuals. Preventative measures need to be devised and the treatment should be all-encompassing. Keywords: Elderly individuals, Fractures, Face, Epidemiologyhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352587818300111
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandrine Vlavonou
Tan Mai Nguyen
Gaoussou Touré
spellingShingle Sandrine Vlavonou
Tan Mai Nguyen
Gaoussou Touré
Epidemiology of facial fractures in the elderly
JPRAS Open
author_facet Sandrine Vlavonou
Tan Mai Nguyen
Gaoussou Touré
author_sort Sandrine Vlavonou
title Epidemiology of facial fractures in the elderly
title_short Epidemiology of facial fractures in the elderly
title_full Epidemiology of facial fractures in the elderly
title_fullStr Epidemiology of facial fractures in the elderly
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiology of facial fractures in the elderly
title_sort epidemiology of facial fractures in the elderly
publisher Elsevier
series JPRAS Open
issn 2352-5878
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Facial fractures are considered more common in young individuals. However, they are also increasing in the aging population. Investigation of the characteristics of such fractures is important so as to be able to devise preventive measures and specifications for their proper treatment. We carried out a descriptive retrospective epidemiological study. The information was taken from a database of medical files of patients over 65 years of age in the setting of the emergency ward. Patient information was included for 157 patients aged 65 to 100 years. Two-thirds of the individuals with facial trauma were women. Twenty-eight had a prior history of cognitive impairment. For half of the cases, the trauma occurred at their place of residence, while accidents and falls in public areas were not uncommon. The most frequent site for the fractures was the middle third of the face. These facial fractures were serious in light of their location, as well as the associated skeletal and intracranial lesions. The number of such fractures can be expected to increase with time. Their hospital cost is higher than with younger individuals. Preventative measures need to be devised and the treatment should be all-encompassing. Keywords: Elderly individuals, Fractures, Face, Epidemiology
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352587818300111
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AT tanmainguyen epidemiologyoffacialfracturesintheelderly
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