External Fixation for War-Related Mandibular Fractures in a Resource-Limited Setting: A Retrospective Study of 91 Patients
Franck Masumbuko Mukamba, Liévin Muhindo, Marie-Hélène Bisimwa, Paul Budema, Fabrice Cikomola, Georges Kuyigwa, Olivier Cornu, Gregory Reychler, Hervé Reychler, Raphael Olszewski

TL;DR
This study examines the use of external fixation for treating severe jaw fractures caused by war in a resource-limited area, showing it can lead to acceptable healing outcomes.
Contribution
The study provides evidence that external fixation is a viable treatment for complex war-related mandibular fractures in low-resource settings.
Findings
External fixation achieved successful bone healing in 78% of patients without secondary procedures.
Fracture-site infection was the most frequent complication, occurring in 30.8% of cases.
Bone loss at presentation and clinical infection at admission were significantly linked to infection.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: War-related mandibular injuries result in extensive soft-tissue damage, severe comminution, and bone loss, and are associated with high rates of infection and delayed healing. No universally accepted management protocol exists for these injuries. External fixation is commonly used in this context, particularly when internal fixation is unavailable or contraindicated. This study aimed to analyze injury patterns, treatment outcomes, and complications of war-related mandibular fractures treated with external fixation as a primary and definitive stabilization method in a resource-limited setting in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Methods: A retrospective review was conducted of all patients who sustained war-related mandibular fractures and were treated with external fixation between January 2017 and December 2024 at the Hôpital Provincial Général de Référence…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFacial Trauma and Fracture Management · Trauma and Emergency Care Studies · Traumatic Ocular and Foreign Body Injuries
