TITLE:
Pre-Hospital Management of Craniocerebral Trauma in South Saharan Africa: Cotonou Experience
AUTHORS:
Abd El Kader Moumouni, Essossinam Kpelao, Holden Olatoundji Fadigba, Agbeko Achille Doleagbenou, Ibrahima Berete, Dabou Abiba Tamou Tabe, Emile Mensah, Martin Chobli
KEYWORDS:
Emergency, Craniocerebral, Africa South-Sahara, Pre Hospital Management
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Modern Neurosurgery,
Vol.9 No.3,
May
8,
2019
ABSTRACT: The management of craniocerebral trauma begins at the site of the accident. This is one of the diseases for which pre-hospital care is well codified. The objective of this study is to report the experience of the Emergency Aid Medical Service (EMAS) of BENIN in the pre-hospital management of craniocerebral trauma. 146 head injuries were cared for. 116 were male. The mean age was 32 years with extremes ranging from 2 to 77 years. Etiology in 68% of patients was a public road accident. And the request for the use of the EMAS was made by highway users for 41% of the injuries. About 5.5% were severe cranio-brain injuries, more than 75% of which had died in intensive care. In 77% of the EMAS interventions, there was an intensive care physician in the team. 34 wounded had been transported in a vacuum mattress. The rigid cervical collar was used in 8 major traumas. All the wounded were transported by ambulance. The duration of hospitalization varied from a few hours in the emergency department to 90 days in the hospital ward. 9 patients died. One of them, who died in an ambulance, was a woman. The prehospital medical care of head trauma in BENIN is still progressing.