Olawunmi Fatusi
Obafemi Awolowo University
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Nigerian journal of surgery : official publication of the Nigerian Surgical Research Society | 2014
Kizito Ndukwe; Stephen Babatunde Aregbesola; Ic Ikem; V.I. Ugboko; Kehinde E. Adebiyi; Olawunmi Fatusi; Fj Owotade; Ramat Oyebunmi Braimah
Objectives: The aim of this study is to evaluate the success rate and complications of mandibular reconstruction with nonvascularized bone graft in Ile-Ife, Nigeria. Patients and Methods: A total of 25 patients who underwent reconstruction of mandibular discontinuity defects between January 2003 and February 2012, at the Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospitals Complex, Ile-Ife constituted the study sample. Relevant information was retrieved from the patients′ records. This information include patients′ demographics (age and sex) as well as the type of mandibular defect, cause of the defect, type of mandibular resection done, source of the bone graft used, and the method of graft immobilization. Morbidity associated with the graft procedures were assessed by retrieving information on graft failures, length of hospital stay following surgery, rehabilitation device used and associated graft donor and recipient site complications. Result: There were 12 males and 13 females with a male:female ratio was 1:1.1. The age of the patients ranged from 13 to 73 years with a mean age for males 32.7 ± standard deviation (SD) 12.9 and for females 35.0 ± SD 17.1. Jaw defect was caused by resection for tumours and other jaw pathologies in 92% of cases. Complete symphyseal involvement defect was the most common defect recorded 11 (44%). Reconstruction with nonvascularized rib graft accounted for 68% of cases while iliac crest graft was used in 32% of the patients. Successful take of the grafts was recorded in 22 patients while three cases failed. Wound dehiscence (two patients) and postoperative wound infection (eight patients) were the most common complications recorded. Conclusion: The use of nonvascularized graft is still relevant in the reconstruction of large mandibular defects caused by surgical ablation of benign conditions in Nigerians. Precise surgical planning and execution, extended antibiotic therapy, and meticulous postoperative care contributed to the good outcome.
Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2008
Olalere Gbolahan; Olawunmi Fatusi; Fj Owotade; Jelili Adisa Akinwande; Kehinde E. Adebiyi
PURPOSE The study assessed the prevalence and the clinical and histologic pattern of soft tissue lesions associated with extracted teeth and determined the validity of clinical diagnoses in comparison with histologic diagnosis. PATIENTS AND METHODS Soft tissue from the apices of 100 teeth extracted by the intra-alveolar approach and from the follicle of 50 teeth extracted by the transalveolar approach was examined histologically subsequent to clinical diagnosis. The subjects were seen within a 2-year period at the Oral Surgery unit of a Nigerian teaching hospital. Association between age, gender, and the histopathologic diagnosis was assessed, and the clinical presumptive diagnoses were compared with the histopathologic diagnoses using the epidemiologic parameters of sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values. RESULTS There were 76 (50.7%) males and 74 (49.3%) females, with age range of 17 to 77 years (33 +/- 14 years). Although clinical diagnosis indicated that all the cases were inflammatory in origin, histopathologic diagnosis reported 84% to be of inflammatory origin, 10% to be normal tissue, and 6% to be noninflammatory in nature. The noninflammatory lesions included dentigerous cyst (4%), central giant cell granuloma (1.3%), and ameloblastoma (0.7%). Gender and age were not associated statistically with type and frequency of pathology. Inflammatory conditions showed the highest sensitivity (98%). CONCLUSIONS The study showed that the probability of clinical misdiagnosis of pathologically significant lesions associated with extracted teeth is lowest with inflammation and highest with cysts and neoplasms. Thus, routine histopathologic examination of all recoverable soft tissues associated with extracted teeth would contribute to improve management of cases although the cost and related implications of this need to be investigated further.
Annals of Tropical Paediatrics | 1997
Lateef Salawu; Olawunmi Fatusi; Foluso Kemi-Rotimi; Olugbenga O. Adeodu; Muheez A. Durosinmi
Three Nigerian sib-pairs with familial Burkitts lymphoma (BL) seen between 1986 and 1996 are described. Their ages ranged from 4 to 20 years (median 9.5), and there were five males and one female. The mean age interval between each pair at presentation was 4 years (3-6) and the mean time interval 22 months (0.3-41). Two of the sib-pairs were sex-concordant, including a set of monozygotic twins. Five of the patients presented in stage C and one in stage A. Parental consanguinity was not found in any group. Space-clustering was confirmed in all three but time-clustering in only one. The occurrence of BL in multiple members of the same family, the presence of sex concordance and the relatively wide variation in the time of onset of disease between each pair suggest genetic predisposition as a possible additional aetiological factor for BL in the families affected.
Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2003
F.O Oginni; Olawunmi Fatusi; A.O Alagbe
The journal of contemporary dental practice | 2005
Ogunbodede Eo; Olawunmi Fatusi; Akintomide A; Kolawole K; Ajayi A
The journal of contemporary dental practice | 2005
Ogunbodede Eo; Olawunmi Fatusi; Folayan Mo; Olayiwola G
The journal of contemporary dental practice | 2005
Fj Owotade; Olawunmi Fatusi; Adebiyi Ke; Ajike So; Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan
British Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery | 2002
Kizito Ndukwe; Olawunmi Fatusi; V.I. Ugboko
BMC Oral Health | 2014
Dada Oluwaseyi Temilola; Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan; Olawunmi Fatusi; Nneka M Chukwumah; Nneka Onyejaka; Elizabeth Obhioneh Oziegbe; Titus Oyedele; Kikelomo Adebanke Kolawole; Hakeem Olatunde Agbaje
African Journal of Reproductive Health | 2014
Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan; Bridget Haire; Abigail Harrison; Olawunmi Fatusi; Brandon Brown