Journal of Clinical Medicine (Nov 2023)

Animal Bite Injuries to the Face: A Retrospective Evaluation of 111 Cases

  • Michael Maurer,
  • Cornelius Schlipköter,
  • Maximilian Gottsauner,
  • Waltraud Waiss,
  • Johannes K. Meier,
  • Mathias Fiedler,
  • Johannes G. Schuderer,
  • Juergen Taxis,
  • Torsten E. Reichert,
  • Tobias Ettl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12216942
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 21
p. 6942

Abstract

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The treatment of bite wounds to the face is discussed controversially in relation to surgery and antibiotics. The aim of this study is a retrospective evaluation of 111 cases of animal bite injuries to the face that presented to our unit of oral and maxillofacial surgery over a 13-year period. Children under 10 years of age were predominantly involved. A total of 94.5% of the assessed injuries were caused by dogs. Wound infections occurred in 8.1%. Lackmann type II was the most common type of injury (36.9%). The perioral area was affected most frequently (40.5%). Primary wound closure was carried out in 74.8% of the cases. In 91.9% of the cases, antibiotic prophylaxis was prescribed. The most often administered type of antibiotic was amoxicillin with clavulanic acid (62.1%). Patients without antibiotics showed an increased infection rate without significance. Wound infections occurred significantly more frequently in wounds to the cheeks (p = 0.003) and when local flap reconstruction was necessary (p = 0.048). Compared to the other surgical treatment options, primary closure showed the lowest infection rates (4.8%, p = 0.029). We recommend antibiotic prophylaxis using amoxicillin with clavulanic acid and wound drains for wounds of Lackmann class II or higher. Primary closure seems to be the treatment of choice whenever possible.

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