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Journal Article

Citation

Dendle C, Looke D. Aust. Fam. Physician 2009; 38(11): 868-874.

Affiliation

Department of Infectious Diseases, Southern Health, Melbourne, Victoria. clairedendle@hotmail.com

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Royal Australian College of General Practitioners)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

19893832

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mammalian bites are a significant public health problem in Australia, with the majority of bites coming from dogs. Complications include tissue damage from the bite itself, infection and post-traumatic stress disorder. OBJECTIVE: This article describes the assessment and management of mammalian bites in the Australian general practice setting based on a PubMed search of the English language literature from the years 1966 to present. DISCUSSION: General practitioners need to be familiar with the treatment of animal bites, pitfalls in management, and the need to educate patients on ways to avoid future bite injuries. Meticulous wound cleaning, irrigation, exploration and debridement is essential to bite wound healing. Recognition of complicating fractures with imaging is important. Risk of infection differs among animal species, although most infected bite wounds are polymicrobial.


Language: en

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