5 results on '"Olugbemiga Ogunlewe"'
Search Results
2. Pediatric Surgical Waitlist in LMICs during the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Author
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Greg Klazura, Paul Park, Ava Yap, Ruth Laverde, Emma Bryce, Maija Cheung, Ernestina Bioh, Sacha Hamilton, Phyllis Kisa, Nasser Kakembo, Michele Ugazzi, Martin Situma, Eric Borgstein, Miliard Derbew, Samuel Negash, Amezene Tadesse, Bruce Bvulani, Bertille Ki, Tapsoba Toussaint, Zaitun Bokhary, Godfrey Sama, Emmanuel Ameh, Mulenga Mulewa, Jonathan Mwansa, Ifeanyichukwu Onah, Vanda Amado, Daniel Ugarte, Fabian Massaga, Samwel Byabato, Wasiu Lanre Adeyemo, Olugbemiga Ogunlewe, Bip Nandi, and Doruk Ozgediz
- Abstract
Purpose: COVID-19 led to significant reduction in surgery worldwide. Studies, however, of the effect on surgical volume for pediatric patients in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are limited.Methods: A survey was developed to estimate waitlists in LMICs for priority surgical conditions in children. The survey was piloted and revised before it was deployed over email to 19 surgeons. Pediatric surgeons at 15 different sites in 8 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and Ecuador completed the survey from February 2021 to June 2021. The survey included the total number of children awaiting surgery and estimates for specific conditions. Respondents were also able to add additional procedures. Results: Public hospitals had longer wait times than private facilities. The median waitlist was 90 patients and the median wait time was 2 months for elective surgeries.Conclusion: Lengthy surgical wait times affect surgical access in LMICs. COVID-19 had been associated with surgical delays around the world, exacerbating existing surgical backlogs. Our results revealed significant delays for elective, urgent and emergent cases across Sub-Saharan Africa. Stakeholders should consider approaches to scale the limited surgical and perioperative resources in LMICs, create mitigation strategies for future pandemics, and establish ways to monitor waitlists on an ongoing basis.
- Published
- 2022
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3. Influence of trans-operative complications on socket healing following dental extractions
- Author
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Wasiu Lanre, Adeyemo, Akinola Ladipo, Ladeinde, and Mobolanle Olugbemiga, Ogunlewe
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Adult ,Male ,Tooth Crown ,Wound Healing ,Adolescent ,Dry Socket ,Middle Aged ,Fractures, Bone ,Tooth Fractures ,Tooth Extraction ,Alveolar Process ,Humans ,Surgical Wound Infection ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Tooth Root ,Tooth Socket ,Child ,Intraoperative Complications ,Aged - Abstract
Extraction healing complications have been attributed to several factors. The influence of trans-operative complications on an extraction site wound healing was the focus of this investigation.This prospective study was conducted at the Oral Surgery Clinic of the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) in Nigeria . Subjects selected were those referred for one or two adjacent extractions and who satisfied the inclusion criteria for the study. The relevant pre-operative information recorded for each patient were age and sex of patient, indications for extraction, time taken to extract the tooth, tooth/teeth removed, and any trans-operative complications. Extractions were performed with dental forceps, elevators, or both under local anaesthesia. Patients were blindly evaluated on the third and seventh post-operative day for socket healing assessment without reference to pre-operative information on the patients.Seventy-three (24.25%) of 301 teeth considered for socket healing assessment had various trans-operative complications due to accidental crown, root, or alveolar bone fractures. Of the 73 extractions with trans-operative complications during extraction, 18 developed a socket healing complication, while 17 of the 228 extractions without trans-operative complications developed socket healing complications (p = .000). The mean (SD) time taken to extract teeth developing healing complications was also found to be significantly longer than those without healing complications (p.01).The study demonstrated the combination of tooth/bone fragments in the socket and increased time of extraction due to trans-operative complications and accidents predispose to the development of extraction site wound healing disturbance.
- Published
- 2007
4. Clinical evaluation of post-extraction site wound healing
- Author
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Wasiu Lanre, Adeyemo, Akinola Ladipo, Ladeinde, and Mobolanle Olugbemiga, Ogunlewe
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pain, Postoperative ,Wound Healing ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Adolescent ,Dry Socket ,Middle Aged ,Bone Diseases, Infectious ,Postoperative Complications ,Tooth Extraction ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Tooth Socket - Abstract
The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the clinical pattern of post-extraction wound healing with a view to identify the types, incidence, and pattern of healing complications following non-surgical tooth extraction.A total of 311 patients, who were referred for non-surgical (intra-alveolar) extractions, were included in the study. The relevant pre-operative information recorded for each patient included age and gender of the patient, indications for extraction, and tooth/teeth removed. Extractions were performed under local anesthesia with dental forceps, elevators, or both. Patients were evaluated on the third and seventh postoperative days for alveolus healing assessment. Data recorded were: biodata, day of presentation for alveolus healing assessment, day of onset of any symptoms, body temperature (degrees C) in cases of alveolus infection, and presence or absence of pain.Two hundred eighty-two patients (282) with 318 extraction sites were evaluated for alveolus healing. Healing was uneventful in 283 alveoli (89%), while 35 alveoli (11%) developed healing complications. These complications were: localized osteitis 26 (8.2%); acutely infected alveolus 5 (1.6%); and an acutely inflamed alveolus 4 (1.2%). Females developed more complications than males (p=0.003). Most complications were found in molars (60%) and premolars (37.1%). Localized osteitis caused severe pain in all cases, while infected and inflamed alveolus caused mild or no pain. Thirty patients (12%) among those without healing complications experienced mild pain.Most of the post-extraction alveoli healed uneventfully. Apart from alveolar osteitis (AO), post-extraction alveolus healing was also complicated by acutely infected alveoli and acutely inflamed alveoli. This study also demonstrated a painful alveolus is not necessarily a disturbance of post-extraction site wound healing; a thorough clinical examination must, therefore, be made to exclude any of the complications.
- Published
- 2006
5. Ameloblastoma: analysis of 207 cases in a Nigerian teaching hospital
- Author
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Akinola Ladipo, Ladeinde, Mobolanle Olugbemiga, Ogunlewe, Babatunde Olamide, Bamgbose, Wasiu Lanre, Adeyemo, Oluseyi Folake, Ajayi, Godwin Toyin, Arotiba, and Jelili Adisa, Akinwande
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Maxillary Neoplasms ,Adolescent ,Age Factors ,Nigeria ,Middle Aged ,Ameloblastoma ,Mandibular Neoplasms ,Sex Factors ,Humans ,Female ,Age of Onset ,Child ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The aim of the study was to review all the cases of ameloblastoma seen at the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Clinic of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Nigeria, between 1980 and 2003.In this retrospective study, case files and biopsy reports of new cases of ameloblastoma covering a 24-year period were retrieved and analyzed for sex, age on presentation, histologic type, and site distribution.A total of 207 cases of ameloblastoma were seen in the given period. One hundred and ninety-eight (95.7%) were benign, and 9 (4.3%) were malignant. A male-to-female ratio of 1.1:1 was found. The average ages on presentation for ameloblastoma and ameloblastic carcinoma were 31.67 and 46.44 years, respectively. The lesion was found to be more common in the premolar-molar region of the mandible. The most common histologic type was follicular ameloblastoma (25.1%). Nine (4.3%) cases of ameloblastic carcinoma were also reported.Ameloblastoma with a predilection for the posterior mandibular region is relatively common in our environment. Sex and site distributions are similar to previous reports in the literature.
- Published
- 2006
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