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.

Highlights

  • Craniocerebral trauma is the result of direct or indirect physical aggression of the cranial case and its content

  • 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 objective of this study is to report, the experience of the EMAS Benin, in the pre-hospital management of the traumatized cranial

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Summary

Introduction

Craniocerebral trauma is the result of direct or indirect physical aggression of the cranial case and its content. Its care begins at the scene of the accident It is one of the pathologies for which pre-hospital care is well codified in developed countries [1]. In Benin, it was in 1999 that the Emergency Aid Medical Service (EMAS) service had been set up with the military fire brigade of Benin to provide assistance to the wounded in all situations [1] [2]. They intervene upstream, with the aim of reducing secondary complications to inappropriate transport conditions [3]

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