The aetiology of maxillofacial trauma in Australia: A scoping review

Author:

Pabbati SSR1ORCID,Thomson P1ORCID,Sharma D12ORCID,Bhandari S1

Affiliation:

1. College of Medicine and Dentistry, James Cook University Cairns Queensland Australia

2. School of Health Sciences, College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing, The University of Newcastle Ourimbah New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe oral and maxillofacial complex is subject to a range of traumas. Injuries to the region are devastating and have a great impact on social health outcomes. This review intends to investigate the aetiologies of maxillofacial trauma across Australia.MethodsThis review was written in accordance with the PRISMA‐ScR. Comprehensive searches of CINAHL, MEDLINE, Ovid, Scopus, and Web of Science databases were conducted to identify potentially relevant literature. Quantitative observational epidemiological studies were sought and were required to include at least one aetiology to the maxillofacial region in their data set. A total of 31 eligible studies were included.ResultsThe greatest recorded causes of maxillofacial injuries included inter‐personal violence (34.98%) falls (20.87%), sports (15.62%), and motor‐vehicle accidents (14.31%). These four aetiologies cumulatively accounted for more than 85% of maxillofacial injuries. From all sustained injuries (n = 7661), the orbit was the most prevalent site of fracture (31.85%), followed by the zygoma (22.01%), mandible (21%), nasal bone (12.45%), maxilla (10.04%), dentoalveolus (1.84%), antrum (<1%), and frontal bone (<1%).ConclusionViolence was an unprecedented cause of trauma—additional research is recommended to further characterize the correlation between the two variables. Research is also recommended specifically in regional/rural communities, where data was particularly limited. © 2024 Australian Dental Association.

Funder

Australian Dental Research Foundation

College of Medicine and Dentistry, James Cook University

Publisher

Wiley

Reference56 articles.

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