Academic literature on the topic 'Tongue laceration'

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Journal articles on the topic "Tongue laceration"

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Andi, Arfandi Arifuddin, Sjamsudin Endang, Sylvyana Melita, and Lia Emiliana. "Emergencies treatment for tongue laceration in children : A serial case." International Journal of Medical Reviews and Case Reports 3, no. 7 (2019): 488–93. https://doi.org/10.5455/IJMRCR.emergencies-tongue-laceration.

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Introduction: In children, tongue laceration may occur through several mechanisms, but are most common after a fall or a collision with an object or person. Tongue laceration provides a challenge for an emergency physician with a thought to suture or not. Wound closure typically involves local anaesthesia, sedative drugs, or even general anaesthesia. Objective: To describe emergencies treatment and adequate wound closure for tongue laceration in children. Case Report: Three cases of tongue laceration on the child's in the Emergency Unit, Hasan Sadikin Hospital and Padjadjaran University De
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Hambire, Chaitali, and Umesh Hambire. "To Sew or Not to Sew: A Case Report." Medical Journal of Dr. D.Y. Patil Vidyapeeth 17, no. 6 (2024): 1281–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/mjdrdypu.mjdrdypu_751_23.

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Introduction-Tongue injuries in children vary from slight lacerations to complete amputations. It could be due to fall, self-mutilation, epilepsy, child abuse, or sport injury. The anterior dorsum is the most common site followed by the mid dorsum and anterior ventral part. These injuries may cause dysfunction of tongue, hemorrhage, and disfigurement. Management of injuries of tongue in young children is challenging. There are no established guidelines for managing tongue lacerations. This is a case report of a three-year-old girl with a laceration on the anterolateral part of the tongue with
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Hambire, Chaitali, and Umesh Vishnu Hambire. "To Sew or Not to Sew." Journal of Nature and Science of Medicine 7, no. 2 (2024): 144–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jnsm.jnsm_95_22.

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Abstract Tongue injuries in children vary from slight lacerations to complete amputation. It could be due to falls, self-mutilation, epilepsy, child abuse, or sports injuries. The anterior dorsum is the most common site, followed by the mid dorsum and anterior ventral part. These injuries may cause dysfunction of the tongue, hemorrhage, and disfigurement. Management of injuries of the tongue in young children is challenging. There are no established guidelines for managing tongue lacerations. This is a case report of a 3-year-old girl with a laceration on the anterolateral part of the tongue w
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Gurung, Pratistha, Sneba Shrestha, Mamta Dali, and Bandana Koirala. "Lacerated Tongue Injury in an Infant: A Case Report." Journal of Nepalese Association of Pediatric Dentistry 1, no. 1 (2020): 23–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/jnapd.v1i1.41399.

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Tongue laceration is not uncommon in young children. The most common location for a lacerated tongue injury in children is the anterior dorsum of the tongue. Fall at home is the most common cause of injury. Choosing an optimal treatment option for tongue lacerations remains a challenge due to contradictory recommendations and lack of current guidelines. This case reports the timely intervention and repair of a lacerated tongue injury in an 11-month-old infant under local anesthesia with satisfactory healing where function and esthetics of the tongue was restored. Thus, timely intervention of s
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Jehng, Yauh-Mirng, Francis Tzen-Tak Lee, Yung-Chia Pai, and Wai-Mau Choi. "Traumatic esophageal laceration presenting as a tongue laceration." Journal of Acute Medicine 1, no. 1 (2011): 30–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jacme.2011.07.001.

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Woo, Sang-Woo, and Sang-Hwan Do. "Tongue laceration during electroconvulsive therapy." Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 62, no. 1 (2012): 101. http://dx.doi.org/10.4097/kjae.2012.62.1.101.

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Harel, Svetlana, and Lia Cruz. "Large tongue laceration in a pediatric patient." Visual Journal of Emergency Medicine 13 (October 2018): 111–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.visj.2018.07.024.

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Kaitlyn, Kuntzman, Davis III Wellington, and Esernio-Jenssen Debra. "Uvular bisection from child physical abuse." Archives of Otolaryngology and Rhinology 10, no. 1 (2023): 001–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.17352/2455-1759.000152.

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Oral injuries are common in abused children. In non-mobile infants, these injuries are often inflicted by various instruments, or by hands, fingers, or bottles during feedings. Subsequently, an infant may suffer lacerations/bruising to the tongue, alveolar mucosa, frenum, or the soft and/or hard palate. Rarely, pharyngeal or esophageal perforations may occur from penetrating trauma. This is a unique case of an infant with facial bruising who presented with oral and nasal bleeding and was ultimately discovered to have a palatal laceration with complete bisection of the uvula. Clinicians need to
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Muhsan, Thaer H. "Tetanus: an unusual case associated with Tongue laceration." Journal of Wasit for Science and Medicine 2, no. 1 (2022): 144–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.31185/jwsm.40.

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A case of tetanus is described in a 43 years old Male, The initial presentation was Trismus and dysphagia following a tongue laceration by grossly carious tooth .Subsequently he developed muscular spasm which led to the diagnosis of tetanus. This paper discusses the general management of tetanus
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Pisklakov, Sergey, Vanny Le, and Paul Sandoval. "Tongue Laceration during Neurophysiologic Monitoring with Motor Evoked Potentials." Open Journal of Anesthesiology 02, no. 05 (2012): 226–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojanes.2012.25052.

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Book chapters on the topic "Tongue laceration"

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Neilson, Andrew, and Carl F. Davis. "B4 Lacerations to the Face, Lips, Tongue and Ears." In Basic Techniques in Pediatric Surgery. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-20641-2_36.

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Schamess, Lisa. "L'O de V." In Dark Chaucer. punctum books, 2012. https://doi.org/10.21983/p3.0018.1.12.

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For centuries she didn’t speak at all, the girl Virginia.The silent girl who finally speaks tells the story. Submission, omission, commission, submersion, subversion, inversion, corruption, coercion. Defilement, denial, the child, the trial, fil, fille, vile, ville, filial bonds, bondage, twisted positions and impositions, text and subtext and context and cuntext. Penetration, vellum, hide, marks, pens, wounds, piercings, cuttings, severings, maidenheads, giving head, what’s inside our heads that is left unsaid, what cannot be said being said, the sinkhole in a prison bed, the outburst of consent and the pressure of speech, the hand holding the pencil raced over the paper without the least concern for the hour or the light. The girl was writing the way you speak in the dark to the person you love when you’ve held back the words of love too long and they flow at last2, hysteria catatonia silence asceticism abasement how a woman throws herself is thrown hurls herself is hurled cuts herself is cut how there is an O in the center of the monastery and in the rear of the prison the text is inscribed, marked, stripped, cut, scraped, erased, reinscribed, corrected, raped, rapt, wrapped3 and how this story is old, begins with a snake’s mouth and ends in a bit of tale served up by a woman, an O, once a V, an A(nne), an A(ury), a Pauline nun from the bawdy papers, a Reagent. The Autre. The Autre4 Translation transgression transubstantiation, trasumanar5, tongues, longing, language, sources, apocrypha apostasy outtakes originals pens and penetration, comments, commas, parents, parentheses, prisons, patrimony, patronage, the mouth, the eye, the os, the ass, the orifice, the vacuole, the caesura, the fissure, the seizure, the rapture, ravissement, stripping away, strips of skin, laceration, O in the middle, jouissance,6 O behind, the iron O on the finger, the steel O in the labia, the monsters inside us: The Three-Legged Man, The Headless Woman . . . we forget to remember and remember to forget a story of giving credit and revoking credit of not knowing half the time to whom to give credit.
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Vaz, Larissa Cristina de Moura, Luciana Alves Herdy da Silva, José Massao Miasato, et al. "Orofacial manifestations in violent children sexually: the role of the dentist surgeon in the diagnosis." In METHODOLOGY FOCUSED ON THE AREA OF INTERDISCIPLINARITY- V1. Seven Editora, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.56238/methofocusinterv1-014.

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Sexual abuse against children and adolescents is one of the main public health problems around the world that can cause physical and psychological short and long-term consequences. The objective of this study is to review the literature on signs and symptoms related to sexual abuse in children and adolescents that can be identified by the dentist. The most common orofacial manifestations are composed of lacerations, bruises, or abrasions on the lip, tongue, labial and lingual frenums, gingiva, oral mucosa, dental trauma, ecchymosis, bites, and scratches. Oral lesions from sexual violence are difficult to diagnose because they can be confused with accident or disease, but signs such as erythema, ulcer, and petechiae on the palate can be a sign of sexual practice through forced oral sex, in addition to the presence of symptoms of sexually transmitted infections in the orofacial and oropharyngeal region. Many victims do not show the physical signs mentioned above, therefore, the psychological aspects must be taken into account. The fear on the part of healthcare professionals of seeing violence is a fact since they fear the reaction of family members, the incorrect diagnosis, and the lack of knowledge of how to carry out the notification. In cases of suspected sexual abuse, the dentist must record it in the patient's medical record, followed by notification to Organs' competent bodies. It is concluded that the dentist is a professional capable of acting in the identification of cases involving child sexual abuse.
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