| Literature DB >> 30249239 |
Kristin Alves1,2, Norgrove Penny3, John Ekure4, Robert Olupot5, Olive Kobusingye6, Jeffrey N Katz2, Coleen S Sabatini7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to estimate the prevalence of postinjection paralysis (PIP) and gluteal fibrosis (GF) among children treated in a rural Ugandan Hospital.Entities:
Keywords: Gluteal fibrosis; Post-injection paralysis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30249239 PMCID: PMC6154889 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-018-2254-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Demographic Distribution
| No (%) | Sex (% male) | Age (median, years) (25th – 75th percentile, years) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| GF | 1372 (28.3) | 53.9 | 10 (7–12) |
| Outreach | 1114 | 53.4 | 10 (7–12) |
| Clinic | 258 | 55.8 | 10 (8–12) |
| PIP | 614 (12.7) | 56.7 | 5 (2–8) |
| Outreach | 283 | 52.7 | 6 (3–9) |
| Clinic | 331 | 60.1 | 4 (2–8) |
| Other | 2881 (59.4) | 54.6 | 6 (3–11) |
Demographic distribution of Gluteal Fibrosis (GF) and Post-Injection Paralysis (PIP) in Kumi District, Uganda. Of note, 15 patients had GF and PIP diagnosis, 8 in outreach and 7 in clinic
Fig. 1Case Distribution by Age group. PIP was found more often in children under age 8 while GF more often found in children older than age 8. (*p-value < 0.0001 for association between age and diagnosis, Wilcoxon test)
Distribution of Treatment Recommendations
| No (%) | Surgery | Referral to Surgeon | Assistive Device | Physical Therapy | Other | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outreach Patients | 3339 | |||||
| GF | 1114 (33.4) | n/a | 970 (87%) | 0 | 133 (12%) | 11 (1%) |
| PIP | 283 (8.5) | n/a | 92 (33%) | 109 (39%) | 55 (19%) | 27 (10%) |
| Clinic Patients | 1513 | |||||
| GF | 258 (17.1) | 239 (93%) | n/a | 0 | 14 (5%) | 5 (2%) |
| PIP | 331 (21.9) | 44 (13%) | n/a | 151 (46%) | 118 (36%) | 18 (5%) |
Distribution of treatment recommendations for Gluteal Fibrosis (GF) and Post-Injection Paralysis (PIP) in Kumi District, Uganda