Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care (Jul 2024)

A postmortem study of demographics and severity of thoracoabdominal injuries among patients attending a teaching hospital in northeast India

  • Anupam Datta,
  • Santhosh C. Siddappa,
  • Debaleena Dey,
  • Anamika Nath

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_1925_23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
pp. 3074 – 3077

Abstract

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Introduction: The global estimate reflects 4.4 million injury-related deaths every year and the thoracoabdominal region is frequently injured since it is a wide area. Methods: An autopsy-based cross-sectional study was conducted using a convenient sampling technique for three years. A Chi-square test was conducted for categorical variables. A P value of less than 0.01 was considered statistically significant. Results: Out of 80 cadavers, the male:female ratio was 1:0.31. The commonest age group was 20–29 years. Victims of road traffic accidents were 54 (67.5%) followed by falls from height 10 (12.5%). External thoracic injuries were commoner than internal and vice versa in abdominal injuries. Liver injuries were major in number. Combined thoracic-abdominal and associated injuries were observed in 67 (83.75%) victims. The commonest cause of death was craniocerebral injury combined with hemorrhagic shock (36.25%). Eighteen (22.5%) victims died on the spot having an Injury Severity Score (ISS) of 73.37 followed by a survival time of 1–7 days in 17 (21.25%) cases. A significant correlation was found between ISS and survival period. Conclusion: All thoracic and abdominal injuries represent a possible increase in morbidity and mortality; hence, working toward their prevention and timely intervention is necessary.

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