Mamatkulov  Alisher D.   (Postgraduate student, Department of Neurosurgery, Research Institute of Emergency Pediatric Surgery and Traumatology, Moscow )
                
            
            
                Zaitseva  Ekaterina S.   (Postgraduate student, Department of Neurosurgery, Research Institute of Emergency Pediatric Surgery and Traumatology, Moscow )
                
            
            
                Semenova  Zhanna B.   (Doctor of Medical Sciences, Professor, Research Institute of Emergency Pediatric Surgery and Traumatology, Moscow)
                
            
            
                Akhadov  Tolibjon A.   (Doctor of Medical Sciences, Professor, Research Institute of Emergency Pediatric Surgery and Traumatology, Moscow)
                
            
            
    
        
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                        |  | Introduction: The incidence of depressed skull fractures in infants ranges from 2 to 20%. One of the specific features of depressed fractures in  infants  is an  unusual depression shape (resembling a ping-pong ball) which  requires  specific approaches to their  surgical correction.
Purpose: To assess the effectiveness of two surgical techniques for treating infants with depressed ping-pong ball-like fractures of the skull.
Material and methods 2 400 children under  one year of age  with traumatic brain injury were hospitalized to the Clinical and Research Institute of Emergency Pediatric Surgery and Trauma, in Moscow  from 2017 to 2021. 1 108 of them had computed tomography scanning, and in 27 of them a depressed “ping-pong ball” type fracture  of the  skull was  diagnosed. There were  no signs of intracranial pathology. The authors have made a  retrospective analysis of  outcomes  in infants  after  the reposition of their depressed “ping-pong ball” type skull fractures  with a  reduction  microscrew and/or an elevator.  20 patients had   percutaneous reposition  of the depressed fracture with a reduction microscrew, and  7 patients -  with an elevator. All  infants (n-27)  were operated on within the first 24 hours after admission. Results. Surgical intervention   with a  reduction screw  lasted for  10 ± 1.3 minutes, and  with  an elevator -  25 ± 2.3 minutes. There were no complications in the  postoperative period. Patients stayed in the hospital for one day after screw application , and for  two days – after elevator application. 
  Conclusion. Both reposition  techniques are highly effective  for the  surgical treatment of depressed skull fractures in infants. They  quickly  correct   the  pathology, minimize the risk of clinical manifestations, and  promote optimal aesthetic outcomes. A comparative assessment  of   surgery  duration, postoperative course, complications, and costs of  hospital stay  has shown  that reposition with a reduction screw is faster and less traumatic, but  if there is no effect, it can be converted to   the reposition    with  an  elevator.
 Keywords:traumatic brain injury, depressed skull fracture, reduction microscrew, elevator, pediatric neurosurgery |  | 
        
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                        | Citation link: Mamatkulov  A. D., Zaitseva  E. S., Semenova  Z. B., Akhadov  T. A. THE EFFECTIVENESS OF SURGICAL TREATMENT OF DEPRESSED SKULL FRACTURES IN INFANTS // Современная наука: актуальные проблемы теории и практики. Серия: Естественные и Технические Науки. -2024. -№01/2. -С. 75-81 DOI 10.37882/2223-2966.2024.1-2.07
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