Restoring More than Smiles in Broken Homes: Dental and Oral Biomarkers of Brain Injury in Domestic Violence |
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Authors: | Timothy W Ellis Sheri Brownstein Kevin Beitchman |
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Institution: | 1. Midwestern University College of Dental Medicine Arizona, Glendale, AZ, USA;2. Department of Child Health, University of Arizona College of Medicine – Phoenix, Phoenix, AZ, USA;3. Barrow Neurological Institute at Phoenix Children’s Hospital, Phoenix, AZ, USA;4. College of Science, Engineering, &5. Technology, Grand Canyon University, Phoenix, AZ, USA;6. Beitchman Orthodontics, San Antonio, TX, USA |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTWhile much of the focus on brain injury has centered on athletes and military veterans, victims of domestic violence (DV) comprise an under-represented cohort. Epidemiological studies show that a majority of domestic violence cases have a history of trauma to the head or neck resulting in both TBI and oral maxillofacial damage. However, distinctive oral injuries that are sustained simultaneously with brain trauma as a result of DV have yet to be fully elucidated. If a correlation can be made between specific oral injuries and TBI, then dentition may serve as a reliable biomarker for TBI. Specific dental biomarkers of injury would improve identification, diagnosis, and prognosis of TBI regardless of patient declamation. Dentists have the opportunity and obligation to add significantly to the body of knowledge regarding the frequency, presentation, profile, and characteristics of head and neck injuries of TBI in victims of DV. In so doing, the effort will fill the knowledge gaps and clarify misinformation in the lay, clinical, and scientific communities regarding the impact of TBI in DV events. The dental field can become a leader in branding the procedures, protocols, and clinical practices in the recognition and intervention against TBI in the DV population. |
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Keywords: | Dentistry physical evidence brain injury domestic violence biomarker |
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