Weill Bugando University College of Health Sciences, P,O,Box 1464, Mwanza, Tanzania.
World J Emerg Surg. 2011 Dec 22;6(1):43. doi: 10.1186/1749-7922-6-43.
Though animal-related injuries and fatalities have been documented throughout the world, the variety of attacks by wild animals native to rural East Africa are less commonly described. Given the proximity of our northwestern Tanzania hospital to Lake Victoria, Lake Tanganyika, and the Serengeti National Park, and presentation of several patients attacked by bush animals and suffering a variety of complex injuries, we sought to report the pattern of attacks and surgical management in a resource-limited setting.
Four patients who were admitted to the northwestern Tanzania tertiary referral hospital, Bugando Medical Centre (BMC), in 2010-2011 suffered attacks by different bush animals: hyena, elephant, crocodile, and vervet monkey. These patients were triaged as trauma patients in the Casualty Ward, then admitted for inpatient monitoring and treatment. Their outcomes were followed to discharge.
The age and gender of the patients attacked was variable, though all but the pediatric patient were participating in food gathering or guarding activities in rural locations at the time of the attacks. All patients required surgical management of their injuries, which included debridement and closure of wounds, chest tube insertion, amputation, and external fixation of an extremity fracture. All patients survived and were discharged home.
Though human injuries secondary to encounters with undomesticated animals such as cows, moose, and camel are reported, they often are indirect traumas resulting from road traffic collisions. Snake attacks are well documented and common. However, this series of unique bush animal attacks describes the initial and surgical management of human injuries in the resource-limited setting of the developing world.
Animal attacks are common throughout the world, but their pattern may vary in Africa throughout jungle and bush environmental settings. It is important to understand the management of these attacks in resource-limited health care environment. Further, the growing population and human encroachment on previously wild habitats such as the northwestern Tanzania bush argues for increased community awareness to assist in prevention of human injuries by animals.
尽管世界各地都有与动物相关的伤害和死亡事件的记录,但在农村东非土生土长的野生动物的各种攻击事件却鲜为人知。鉴于我们坦桑尼亚西北部的医院靠近维多利亚湖、坦噶尼喀湖和塞伦盖蒂国家公园,并且有几名患者被丛林动物袭击,遭受了各种复杂的伤害,我们试图在资源有限的情况下报告攻击模式和手术治疗方法。
2010 年至 2011 年,有 4 名患者在坦桑尼亚西北部的三级转诊医院布干达医疗中心(BMC)就诊,他们遭受了不同丛林动物的袭击:鬣狗、大象、鳄鱼和长尾猴。这些患者在急诊室被分诊为创伤患者,然后入院进行住院监测和治疗。他们的治疗结果随访至出院。
被袭击的患者年龄和性别各不相同,但除了儿科患者外,所有患者都是在农村地区进行食物采集或看守活动时遭到袭击的。所有患者的伤口都需要进行手术处理,包括清创和缝合伤口、插入胸腔引流管、截肢和四肢骨折的外固定。所有患者均存活并出院回家。
虽然有报道称人类因遭遇牛、驼鹿和骆驼等未驯化动物而受伤,但这些伤害通常是由道路交通碰撞引起的间接创伤。蛇伤也有详细的记录且很常见。然而,这一系列独特的丛林动物袭击事件描述了发展中国家资源有限环境下人类受伤的初始和手术治疗方法。
动物袭击在世界各地都很常见,但在非洲丛林和丛林环境中,其模式可能有所不同。了解资源有限的医疗环境中这些袭击的处理方法非常重要。此外,随着人口的增长和人类对以前野生动物栖息地的侵占,例如坦桑尼亚西北部的丛林,人们越来越需要提高社区意识,以协助预防人类被动物伤害。