正畸医师在战场后颅颌面创伤重建中的作用。

B Carter Maj, M Speier Col, M Anderson Capt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在现代冲突中,部署的成员比以前的冲突更容易受到颅颌面(CMF)损伤。出现CMF创伤的患者易发生创伤后牙错,可能需要长时间的康复才能达到损伤前的功能。本研究调查了军事卫生保健专业人员,他们是CMF创伤康复团队的潜在贡献者,以评估正畸医生在治疗中的最终结果。方法经国防卫生署信息管理收集办公室(控制编号:9-DHA-1031-E)和空军第59医疗联队机构审查委员会(参考编号:FWH20210061E)批准,于2021年4月至2021年7月进行了一项调查研究。志愿者从正畸医生、口腔颌面外科医生、医学专家和其他在军队医疗保健工作过的牙科专家中招募。受访者报告了他们目前治疗CMF创伤的做法,自我评估了他们对该过程不同方面的知识,并提交了他们对影响结果的系统和患者限制因素的看法。对有序资料进行描述性统计,对分类资料进行卡方检验。Kruskal-Wallis方差分析将队列与进一步的Mann-Whitney U检验进行比较,以区分队列之间的差异。结果共收集有效问卷171份。受访人员主要来自现役军人(93%),分布在正畸医师、口腔颌面外科医师、其他牙科专科医师和医学专科医师中。当报告当前的CMF创伤治疗实践时,大多数牙科专家表示,他们最常参与一个多学科团队来处理任何CMF创伤病例(68.4%),而医学专家最常作为单独的独立提供者执业(53.6%)。牙科专家报告创伤后患者随访时间超过1年,医学专家报告创伤后随访时间最短,中位数为0至3个月。大多数参与者选择至少一个限制CMF创伤护理的系统因素(78.7%)和至少一个限制CMF创伤护理的患者因素(86.3%)。当被问及多学科团队的正畸参与情况时,回答显示了很大的范围,23.1%的时间正畸医生从未被包括在CMF创伤护理中,10.7%的时间总是咨询创伤病例。收集的其他调查数据使调查人员能够得出关于治疗的具体限制和改进建议的结论,以及调查参与者的定性反应。结论正畸治疗虽然在军队中有,但在战后或其他CMF创伤的治疗中未得到充分利用。战场和非战场CMF创伤的治疗既有系统限制因素,也有患者限制因素。此外,在CMF创伤护理中纳入正畸医生也存在一些限制,包括与初级治疗专家的物理距离以及缺乏标准的转诊协议。口腔颌面外科医生对军队正畸医生对CMF创伤治疗团队的贡献的理解最高,医学专家的理解最低。先进的技术工具可以帮助改善结果和多学科互动。需要进一步研究军事治疗设施中完整的CMF创伤康复过程,评估跨专业转诊的效率,并突出功能多学科团队的最佳实践和协议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Orthodontist's Role in Post-Battlefield Craniomaxillofacial Trauma Reconstruction.

Introduction: In modern conflicts, deployed members are more vulnerable to craniomaxillofacial (CMF) injury than in previous conflicts. Patients presenting with CMF trauma are susceptible to post-trauma dental malocclusion and may require lengthy rehabilitation to achieve pre-injury function. This study surveyed military health care professionals who are potential contributors to CMF trauma rehabilitation teams to evaluate the orthodontist's inclusion in treating to the final outcome.

Methods: Following approval from the Defense Health Agency Information Management Collections Office (Control Number: 9-DHA-1031-E) and the Air Force 59th Medical Wing Institutional Review Board (Reference Number: FWH20210061E), a survey study was conducted from April 2021 to July 2021. Volunteer participants were recruited from orthodontists, oral maxillofacial surgeons, medical specialists, and other dental specialists who have worked in military healthcare. Respondents reported their current practice treating CMF trauma, self-evaluated their knowledge of different aspects of the process, and submitted their perceptions on system and patient-limiting factors which affect outcomes. Descriptive statistics were conducted for ordinal data and chi-square tests for categorical data. Kruskal-Wallis analyses of variance compared cohorts with further Mann-Whitney U tests to distinguish the difference in cohorts.

Results: Valid responses were collected from 171 participants. The responses were mostly from active duty military (93%) and well distributed among orthodontists, oral maxillofacial surgeons, other dental specialists, and medical specialists. When reporting current CMF trauma treatment practices, the majority of dental specialists stated they most commonly participate in a multidisciplinary team that addresses any CMF trauma case (68.4%) whereas medical specialists most commonly act as solo independent provider practice (53.6%). Dental specialists reported follow-up with post-trauma patients greater than 1 year and medical specialists reported the shortest post-trauma follow-up time with a median of 0 to 3 months. The majority of participants selected at least one system factor limiting CMF trauma care (78.7%) and at least one patient factor limiting CMF trauma care (86.3%). When asked about orthodontic participation in multidisciplinary teams, the responses showed a great range with orthodontists never included in CMF trauma care 23.1% of the time and always consulted regarding trauma cases 10.7% of the time. Other survey data collected allows the investigators to draw conclusions regarding specific limitations to treatment and recommendations for improvement, along with qualitative responses from survey participants.

Conclusions: Orthodontics, while available in the military, is underutilized in treating post-warfare or other CMF trauma. There are both system- and patient-limiting factors in the treatment of battlefield and non-battlefield CMF trauma. In addition, there are limitations to the inclusion of orthodontists in CMF trauma care which include the physical distance from primary treating specialists and the absence of standard referral protocols. Oral maxillofacial surgeons reported the highest understanding of the military orthodontist's contribution to a CMF trauma treatment team and medical specialists reported the lowest understanding. Advanced technology tools could help improve outcomes and multidisciplinary interactions. Further research is needed to study the complete CMF trauma rehabilitation process in military treatment facilities, evaluate the efficiency of cross-specialty referrals, and highlight best practices and protocols of functioning multidisciplinary teams.

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