GET THE APP

..

Journal of Trauma & Treatment

ISSN: 2167-1222

Open Access

Civilian Gunshot Injuries: Experience from Sokoto, North-West, Nigeria

Abstract

Oboirien M, Agbo SP and Adedeji BK

Introduction: The Proliferation of small arms in the West African sub-region and the activities of insurgent groups and rustlers have caused renewed interest in Gunshot injuries. We aim to document the trend and outcome of such injuries in our sub-region.
Methods: It was a prospective study of cases of gunshot injuries admitted at the University Teaching hospital over a period of 18 months. Parameters analysed included patients’ bio-data, region of the body affected, mechanism and source of projectile, clinical presentations and short term outcome. Statistical analysis was done with IBM SPSS 20. Level of significance was p<0.05.
Results: A total of 43 patients were seen with a mean age of 33.76 ± 10.59. There were 42(97.7%) males and 1(2.3%) female. The victims were mostly farmers (25%), professional drivers (13.6%), Students (11.4%). The body region affected were the lower extremity (36.4%), upper extremity (27.3%), Most of the cases were from armed robbery attack (77.3%) and Assaults (13.6%). Low velocity weapons like Dane guns were the common sources of projectile 95.3%. High velocity weapon like AK 47 was used in 4.7% of cases. Majority of victims were shot at closed range (86.4%) and 79.5% were stable on presentation. Intervention carried out included wound debridement (65.9%), external fixation (23%), and chest tube drainage (9.1%). The outcome was such that 68.2% survived without residual deficit while 31.8% survived with residual deficit.
Conclusion: Gunshot injuries were mainly from armed robbery attack using low velocity weapon with farmers being the most victims. Strict regulations in the acquisition and use of light firearms would reduce the incidence of armed robbery and gun related violence in our sub region.

PDF

Share this article

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 1048

Journal of Trauma & Treatment received 1048 citations as per Google Scholar report

Journal of Trauma & Treatment peer review process verified at publons

Indexed In

 
arrow_upward arrow_upward