A needful, unique, and in-place evaluation of the injuries in earthquake victims with computed tomography, in catastrophic disasters! The 2023 Turkey-Syria earthquakes: part II

This study aimed to determine the computed tomography findings associated with very recent catastrophic 2023 Turkey-Syria earthquake-related injuries and their anatomotopographic distribution in the adult population. The incorporated computed tomography scans of 768 adult cases who had been admitted...

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Veröffentlicht in:Revista da Associacao Medica Brasileira (1992) 2023-01, Vol.69 (8), p.e20230550
Hauptverfasser: Tonkaz, Gokhan, Sengul, Demet, Bekci, Tumay, Sengul, Ilker, Cakir, Ismet Mirac, Onder, Ramazan Orkun, Tonkaz, Duygu Erkal, Eryuruk, Uluhan, Aksoy, Iskender, Veiga, Eduardo Carvalho de Arruda, Aslan, Serdar
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container_issue 8
container_start_page e20230550
container_title Revista da Associacao Medica Brasileira (1992)
container_volume 69
creator Tonkaz, Gokhan
Sengul, Demet
Bekci, Tumay
Sengul, Ilker
Cakir, Ismet Mirac
Onder, Ramazan Orkun
Tonkaz, Duygu Erkal
Eryuruk, Uluhan
Aksoy, Iskender
Veiga, Eduardo Carvalho de Arruda
Aslan, Serdar
description This study aimed to determine the computed tomography findings associated with very recent catastrophic 2023 Turkey-Syria earthquake-related injuries and their anatomotopographic distribution in the adult population. The incorporated computed tomography scans of 768 adult cases who had been admitted to the hospital and had undergone computed tomography imaging after these tragic disasters had been examined on the Teleradiology Reporting System of the Turkish Ministry of Health. To this end, the injuries were classified into six categories: head, thoracic, spinal, pelvic, extremity, and abdominal injury, with three age groups (18-34, 35-64, and ³65 years) and four different imaging intervals (72 h). This study incorporated 316 (41.1%) cases on the first day, 57 (7.5%) on the second day, 219 (28.5%) on the third day, and 176 (22.9%) on the fourth day after the earthquake or later. Of the 768 cases, 109 (14.2%) had a head injury, 100 (13.0%) had a thoracic injury, 99 (12.9%) had a spinal injury, 51 (6.6%) had a pelvic injury, 41 (5.4%) had an extremity injury, and 11 (1.4%) had an abdominal injury. In these regrettable earthquake disasters, we determined a high ratio of head injuries, which was closely followed by thoracic and spinal injuries, in our preliminary outcomes for the pediatric population, Part I. The frequency of abdominal injuries was low among individuals who experienced the earthquake. Last but not least, we have noticed a higher likelihood of spinal injury in individuals older than 65 years in the studied population.
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source MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central; PubMed Central Open Access
subjects Abdominal Injuries
Adolescent
Adult
Child
Disasters
Earthquakes
Humans
Original
Spinal Injuries - epidemiology
Syria
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Turkey - epidemiology
title A needful, unique, and in-place evaluation of the injuries in earthquake victims with computed tomography, in catastrophic disasters! The 2023 Turkey-Syria earthquakes: part II
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