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  Vol. 11 No. 1, Jan-Feb 2009 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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 •Otolaryngology/ Head & Neck Surgery
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Maxillofacial Injuries and Violence Against Women

Oneida A. Arosarena, MD; Travis A. Fritsch, MS; Yichung Hsueh, MD; Behrad Aynehchi, MD; Richard Haug, DDS

Arch Facial Plast Surg. 2009;11(1):48-52.

Objective  To determine if patterns of facial injuries differed between those of female assault victims with maxillofacial injuries and those of female patients with maxillofacial injuries from other causes.

Methods  We reviewed the medical and dental records of 326 adult female facial trauma patients treated by otolaryngologists and oral/maxillofacial surgeons at the University of Kentucky Medical Center. Information abstracted included date of injury, dates of presentation for medical attention, mechanism(s) of injury, diagnoses, and treatments.

Results  While victims of intimate partner violence were more likely to have zygomatic complex fractures, orbital blow-out fractures, and intracranial injuries than were other patients with facial trauma, women assaulted by unknown or unidentified assailants were more likely to have mandible fractures (P = .004).

Conclusion  These results in conjunction with other presenting circumstances, such as delay in presentation, can assist the surgeon treating patients with maxillofacial injury in recognizing interpersonal violence against women.


Author Affiliations: Department of Otolaryngology, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Dr Arosarena); Intimate Partner Violence Surveillance Project, Kentucky Injury Prevention and Research Center (Ms Fritsch), and Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery (Dr Haug), University of Kentucky, Lexington; School of Medicine, Department of Surgery, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky (Dr Hsueh); and Department of Otolaryngology, State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn (Dr Aynehchi).







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