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Journal Article

Citation

Cho HE, Roh SG, Lee NH, Yang KM. Journal of the Korean Society for Surgery of the Hand 2015; 1-7.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015)

DOI

10.12790/jkssh.2015.20.1.1

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE: Self-inflicted wrist laceration is a common injury in the department of hand surgery. The aim of this study was to investigate the clinical characteristics and psychiatric features of self-inflicted wrist laceration using categorization according to wound severity.

METHODS: We reviewed 71 patients from 2002 through 2012. All of the patients were grouped into four groups. Data regarding the following characteristics were collected: age, gender, size, structure involved, instruments used, history of previous self-inflicted injury, comorbidities in psychiatric and presentation of follow-up outpatient appointment to the department of plastic surgery and psychiatry.

RESULTS: In these patients, approximately 64% of patients were female. About 80% of patients cut their wrist using a knife. And in grade 3-4 injury, percentage of glass injury was relatively high (22%), compared with other grades (3%). Unlike previous studies, patients in grade 3-4 tended to cut their wrist repeatedly. Focusing on psychiatric problems, approximately one quarter of patients had a previous history of self-infliction. In all patient groups, mood disorder was the most common disorder in patients who had a previous psychiatric disorder. But after operation, more than two thirds of patients had not visited department of psychiatry again.

CONCLUSION: We identified some other differences among their characteristics. All patients in group also should be evaluated and surgically treated properly. A multidisciplinary approach is required for patients with wrist laceration due to self-injury in comparison to those with laceration due to other causes. Because many of them have previous self-injury experiences and psychiatric disease.


Language: en

Keywords

Suicide; Self mutilation; Laceration; Wrist

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