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Multidisciplinary Therapeutic Management in Complex Cervical Trauma.

Florentina SeverinAndrei-Mihail RosuMirela ȚiglișLaura Elisabeta ChecheritaGina StegaruMihail Dan CobzeanuRazvan HainarosieBogdan Mihail CobzeanuDragos Octavian Palade
Published in: Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) (2023)
Background and Objectives : In the current literature, mandatory surgical exploration is a controversial topic, with some advocating for it and others against it, proposing a selective conservative management. This multidisciplinary therapeutic approach is based on clinical examination and serial paraclinical explorations associated with supportive drug treatment. Materials and Methods : The study group consisted of 103 patients with complex cervical trauma pathology produced by various mechanisms such as car or domestic accidents, aggression, ballistic trauma, self-inflicted attempts, hanging or strangulation hospitalized in the Ear, Nose and Throat (E.N.T.) Clinic, at "St. Spiridon" Iași Hospital, between 2012 and 2016. Results : The universal clinical indication for urgent surgical exploration of the patient with complex cervical trauma is the presence of the following symptoms: unstable vital signs, significant pulsatile bleeding, hematoma with a substantial increase in size, shock, airway obstruction, open airway wound, hematemesis, or hemoptysis. In this context, we considered it worthwhile to research the management of complex cervical trauma in a reference university medical center, alongside the analysis of the patient's characteristics under different aspects (demographic, pathological aspects, therapeutic). Conclusions : Complex cervical trauma has a variety of clinical aspects, with a variable evolution, which involves multidisciplinary therapeutic management. The increasing trauma rate is one of the main public health problems, requiring epidemiological studies, and the implementation of control strategies.
Keyphrases
  • trauma patients
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • mental health
  • emergency department
  • systematic review
  • case report
  • physical activity
  • minimally invasive