Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://cuir.car.chula.ac.th/handle/123456789/14576
Title: Noma in Cambodia : scars from the past
Authors: Gollogly, James G.
Mussomeli, Isaac
Email: No information provided
No information provided
Other author: Children’s Surgical Centre
Children’s Surgical Centre
Subjects: Scars
Orofacial pain
Face -- Diseases
Issue Date: 2007
Publisher: Chulalongkorn University
Citation: Asian biomedicine : research, reviews and news. 1,4(December 2007): 377-381
Abstract: Background: Noma is an orofacial gangrene that tends to afflict starving and malnourished children. It has a high mortality rate, and even if the child survives, a lifelong deformity of the face occurs. There is a worldwide incidence of Noma in areas of mass poverty and famines, but it is rare in South East Asia. In Cambodia, the Children’s Surgical Centre (CSC) has seen and treated 20 patients with facial deformity secondary to Noma occuring in the 1970s (during the “Pol Pot period”). Objective: A review and case report.
URI: http://cuir.car.chula.ac.th/handle/123456789/14576
ISSN: 1905-7415
Type: Article
Appears in Collections:Med - Journal Articles

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