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War Injury Outcomes Improving

After five years of war in Iraq, there is some relatively good medical news about the casualties over there: more than 90 percent are now surviving injuries that would have been fatal in previous conflicts.

Picture of male physician during surgery

A recent issue of the Journal of Craniofacial Surgery (JCS) contains reports on the surgical and treatment advances behind these gains.

The advances are discussed in several articles by craniofacial surgeons who specialize in head and facial trauma injuries - cases involving noses and lips ripped away in bomb blasts, skulls and jaws shattered by bullets, and skin sheared off by burning debris.

 

Civilians May Benefit As Well

According to surgeons who reported their experiences in the journal, changes to treatment guidelines and protocols based on surgical insights, ongoing data collection and analyses have resulted in better treatments for the wounded. In addition, the introduction of civilian trauma experts and weekly video conferences have improved continuity of care for injured soldiers throughout the Military Health System and into the Veterans' Administration system.

"Application of these lessons into training doctrines for standards of practice will ensure optimal outcomes for our patients of today and into the future for soldiers and civilians alike, should the need ever arise," writes JCS contributor Col. W. Bryan Gamble, M.D., of the US Army Medical Corps.

The journal also reports how relatively simple measures to prevent extreme loss of body heat (hypothermia), before wounded soldiers arrive at combat hospitals, have significantly increased survival times. These valuable lessons can be transferred to routine trauma victims in the US to help save more lives.

Better Equipment Often Equals Better Outcome

Wounded soldiers are also transported to hospitals more quickly than ever before, thanks to C-17 Medevacs. "They are really flying ICUs with 12 beds, equipment for resuscitation, IV fluids and more. Just as an ambulance does on the civilian side, the C-17 Medevacs provide damage control," says Dr. Habal, who was an army reserve colonel called to active duty during the first Iraq conflict, Operation Desert Storm.

"We've learned the early operative repair of the orofacial [mouth] region and the reconstruction of the soft tissue position is critical in obtaining optimal aesthetic and functional results. We've also found it is important that the remaining segments of the maxilla and mandible [jaw] be held in an anatomic position through the period of soft tissue and bone reconstruction to limit the magnitude of the deformity," he states.

The results, revealed in photos that accompany the journal articles, are remarkable. They show horribly scarred and misshapen faces transformed into faces that often appear virtually normal.

Always consult your physician for more information.

 

May 2008


General Surgery

Facial Nerve Clinic

Otolaryngology / Head & Neck Surgery

Reconstructive Plastic Surgery

Stanford Plastic Surgery

Reconstructive versus Cosmetic Plastic Surgery

The word "plastic" is derived from the Greek word "plastikos" which means "to mold or shape". Plastic surgery is the surgical specialty that deals with the reconstruction of facial and body tissue that requires a reshaping or remolding due to disease, a defect, or disorder. This surgery is conducted in order to approximate a normal appearance or to repair working ability.

Cosmetic (aesthetic) plastic surgery repairs or reshapes otherwise normal structures of the body, primarily to improve the patient's appearance and self-esteem.

In general, reconstructive surgery is performed on abnormal structures of the body that may be caused by the following:

  • trauma
  • infection
  • developmental abnormalities
  • congenital (present at birth) anomalies
  • disease
  • tumors

With either reconstructive or cosmetic plastic surgery, it is important for patients to select physicians who are certified in plastic surgery by the American Board of Plastic Surgery.

Generally, a surgeon who is board-certified in plastic surgery has graduated from an accredited medical school and has completed at least five years of graduate medical education - usually three years of general surgery and two years of plastic surgery.

In addition, the surgeon must practice plastic surgery for two years and pass comprehensive written and oral examinations to become board-certified.

Always consult your physician for more information.


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