Publications by authors named "Sebastian Hentsch"

The severity and extent of gunshot and blast injuries are often misjudged due to a lack of specialist knowledge. The aim of this article is to outline the characteristics of gunshot and blast injuries, including emergency diagnostics and initial surgical treatment.Due to multiple high-energy penetrating injuries, barotrauma, or blunt trauma, affected patients are usually polytraumatized, with multiple organ damage and an average Injury Severity Score (ISS) of > 36.

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Purpose: The classification systems by Anderson and D'Alonzo, Effendi, Benzel and others have limitations when it comes to morphologically categorising fractures of the second cervical vertebral body (C2) that present with or without an additional fracture of the dens or with or without an extension of the fracture line into the vertebral arch and displacement. Currently, there are no definitive recommendations for the treatment of fractures at the junction of the dens with the vertebral body of C2 on the basis of outcome and stability data. Depending on patient anatomy, either anterior or posterior approaches can be used to fuse C1 and C2 and to achieve definitive surgical stabilisation.

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Objective: Gunshot injuries, blast injuries, and major contusions can cause extensive extremity defects. In countries with damaged or destroyed infrastructure, local national patients with these injuries pose a challenge. Deployed medical facilities of the German Armed Forces provide medical care to these patients as part of their humanitarian activities.

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Treatment of osseous defects of the extremities is a constantly recurring challenge in modern reconstructive surgery. This applies, in particular, to military surgery, especially to the sequelae of gunshot and blast injuries. Severe soft-tissue damage and inevitable contamination lead to an increased rate of infection.

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