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Complications of pediatric craniofacial surgery in the Orient: analysis of a 10-year experience
Authors:AK Oh  S Kim  KC Wang  CG Park  CW Kim  BK Cho
Affiliation:Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, School of Medicine, Loma Linda University, CA 92350, USA.
Abstract:Numerous reports on the complications of craniofacial surgery have been published in the western world. However, relatively little such information concerning Oriental populations has been documented. We therefore set out to provide a retrospective analysis of all the complications of craniofacial surgery encountered during the 10-year period of 1986 to 1995 at Seoul National University Children's Hospital, the only children's hospital in Korea. Forty-nine children underwent 57 consecutive craniofacial procedures at our institution during 1986 to 1995. A retrospective chart analysis of the frequency and types of complications was performed. Mantel-Haenszel chi-square tests were then calculated for several factors, including age at surgery, duration of surgery, intraoperative losses of hemoglobin and hematocrit, total amount of blood transfusion, and the number of complications according to year, diagnosis, and operative procedure to find any significant correlation with the incidence of complications. Mortality was 1.8%. The major complication rate was 7.0% and included cases of visual loss and persistent cerebrospinal fluid leak. Analysis revealed the presence of several trends, including an increased incidence of complications with increased patient age at surgery, duration of surgery, and intraoperative loss of hematocrit. The number of complications was also noted to increase in cases with complex craniofacial synostosis syndromes (Crouzon's, Apert's Antley-Bixler, etc.) and tumors of the orbit and cranium. Finally, complications were noted to decrease in recent years, most likely due to the increased experience of our craniofacial team. Nevertheless, statistical analysis revealed that the incidence of complications correlated significantly only with increased duration of surgery (p < 0.05). The results of our study indicate that although craniofacial surgery in the Orient carries an inherent risk for significant complications, the risk can be minimized and the rate of mortality and major complications kept to an acceptable level by a careful and experienced craniofacial team. Groups at most risk for complications are those with a long duration of surgery.
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