Fairway to fractures: Income inequality and violent crime as the driving factors for golf club-related assaults - a case series of 21 compound skull fractures.
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Golf club-related traumatic brain injuries are an uncommon occurrence in adults, and the use of golf clubs as a weapon of interpersonal assault resulting in compound skull fractures is rare.
Objective: To present a case series of golf club-related compound skull fractures in adults secondary to assault, representing the largest study of this entity to date.
Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed of a prospectively maintained database for patients admitted to Tygerberg Academic Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa, with golf club-related compound skull fractures between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2021. Data on demographic details, computed tomography brain image findings, presenting Glasgow Coma Scale, surgical operative notes, septic complications and outcomes at discharge were collected.
Results: A total of 21 patients were included. The majority were male (95.2%) and the mean age was 32.6 years. Fractures were most commonly seen in the frontal bone (n=9), followed by parietal (n=8), temporal (n=3) and occipital (n=1) bones. Depressed skull fractures were the most common type of injury, and local pneumocephalus was present in the majority of patients. The mean presenting Glasgow Coma Scale was 14, and most patients had no focal neurological deficits. Surgical debridement was required in the majority of patients, with a high rate of septic complications (33.3%). However, most patients had good neurological outcomes at discharge, and the mean length of stay was 11.9 days.
Conclusion: This study highlights the potential dangers of golf clubs as a weapon of interpersonal assault, and the need for prompt and appropriate management of compound skull fractures to reduce the risk of complications.
期刊介绍:
The SAMJ is a monthly peer reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal. It carries The SAMJ is a monthly, peer-reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal publishing leading research impacting clinical care in Africa. The Journal is not limited to articles that have ‘general medical content’, but is intending to capture the spectrum of medical and health sciences, grouped by relevance to the country’s burden of disease. This will include research in the social sciences and economics that is relevant to the medical issues around our burden of disease
The journal carries research articles and letters, editorials, clinical practice and other medical articles and personal opinion, South African health-related news, obituaries, general correspondence, and classified advertisements (refer to the section policies for further information).