Investigating Research Hotspots of Combat-related Spinal Injuries: A 30-year Bibliometric Analysis Study

Author:

Wang Pengru1ORCID,Zhou Shangbin2,Li Bo1,Wang Yingtian3,Xu Wei1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopedic Oncology, Changzheng Hospital, Naval Military Medical University , Shanghai 200003, China

2. Department of Orthopedic Oncology, Naval Medical Center, Naval Military Medical University , Shanghai 200030, China

3. Medical Administration Division, Chinese PLA General Hospital , Beijing 100141, China

Abstract

ABSTRACT Introduction Spinal cord injuries often lead to significant motor and sensory deficits, as well as autonomic dysfunction. Compared with normal spinal injuries, combat-related spinal injuries (CRSIs) are usually more complex and challenging to treat because of multiple traumas, firing-line treatments, and arduous initial treatments on a battlefield. Yet numerous issues remain unresolved about clinical treatment and scientific research. The enhancement of CRSI diagnosis and treatment quality by military surgeons and nurses is imperative. The objective of this study is to identify the frontiers, hotspots, and trends among recent research, summarize the development process of clinical trials, and visualize them systematically. Materials and Methods We collected publications from CRSI based on the Core Collection of Web of Science for 30 years from January 1, 1993 to May 1, 2023.Visualizations of the knowledge maps were produced using VOSviewer and CiteSpace software. We examined annual trends of publications and distribution patterns, the number of publications, as well as the research hotspots. Results Among 201 documents, it was found that there was a stable upward trend in publications. There were 2 rapid growth stages during the 30 years. Among all countries, the USA contributed the most publications, along with the highest influence and the most international cooperation. Military Medicine was the journal of the maximum publications, whereas the Spine journal was the most influential one. Keyword co-occurrence analysis and trend topics analysis revealed that these articles focused 5 distinct categories for CRSI. Conclusions As the first bibliometric study focused on CRSI, we demonstrated the evolution of the field and provided future research directions. We summarized the hotspots and 5 clusters published. This would serve as a useful guide for clinicians and scientists regarding CRSI global impacts.

Funder

The Research Projects of Shanghai Province

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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