
Epidemiology and structure concomitant craniocerebral and skeletal injuries in Tashkent
Author(s) -
A. А. Turapov,
S. S. Rabinovich,
К. Э. Махкамов,
M. E. Burnashev,
E. Yu. Valiyev,
T. S. Musayev
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
bûlletenʹ sibirskoj mediciny
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.135
H-Index - 3
eISSN - 1819-3684
pISSN - 1682-0363
DOI - 10.20538/1682-0363-2008-5-2-428-432
Subject(s) - concomitant , epidemiology , medicine , poison control , injury prevention , craniocerebral trauma , surgery , emergency medicine
In period of 2001—2004 in Tashkent we observe growing concomitant craniocerebral and skeletal injuries (CCCSI) on 4,8% per annum. People of working age (at the age of 21—60) often get concomitant craniocerebral and skeletal injuries (CCCSI) though males dominate at the age of 21—40. But at the age of 15—20 and above 60 years old females get a CCCSI in 2—2,5 times higher, than males. Patients admission to hospital at different times greatly differentiates: the largest was in period from 13 to 18 hours and smallest was from 0 to 6 hours. Road trauma appearance is principal cause of concomitant craniocerebral and skeletal injuries (CCCSI) in Tashkent in all the years of observation. It has the tendency to grow from 19,4 to 29,1%. Noticeable growing of concomitant craniocerebral and skeletal injuries (CCCSI) is alarming at the work and in sport. The severe skeleton injuries were dominant among all kind of injuries.