A Socio-demographic and Clinical Study on Surgical Cases in a Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital, Suraram, Hyderabad

Authors

  • K Srinivasulu
  • A Manmadha Kishan
  • Nikhitha Puvvala
  • Boinpally Ruchitha
  • Nakkala Supraja
  • Butta Ramesh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37506/ijphrd.v14i4.19766

Keywords:

Socio demographic profile, clinical profile, surgical cases

Abstract

A descriptive study on surgical case profile related to socio demographic and clinical aspects was conducted
in a tertiary care teaching hospital Hyderabad, Telangana. This was a retrospective and record based study. A
total of 885 case sheets were collected from Medical record department among which 488 were males and 397
were females. In-patient surgical case sheets were collected from 1st July 2021 to 30th June 2022 for a period of
one year after obtaining permission from the Institutional Ethics Committee. Absolute professional secrecy was
maintained. All inpatient case sheets from department of Surgery were collected from the medical records and
considered for this study. The study results were evaluated and analyzed by SPSS software.
We found that highest number of patients admitted was in the age group of 31 to 50 years. Co- morbid conditions
like hypertension and diabetes (23.9%) was associated with surgical conditions. Majority of patients were from
urban locality (62.7%). Pain abdomen (36.3%) followed by swelling both inflammatory and tumor (35.5%) were
the common clinical presentations at the time of admission. Highest cases of surgical conditions in our study were
inflammatory swellings (17.9%), followed by benign tumors (17%), hernias(12.4%), appendicitis 9.2%, cholecystitis
and cholelithiasis (9%), acid peptic diseases (7.2%) and renal calculi contributing 6.3%. Of the malignant conditions
(3.16%) noticed, carcinoma of breast was common in females and oral cancers were commonest in males. Inguinal
hernias were common in males and incisional hernias were common in females. Highest number of cholecystitis
and cholelithiasis were observed in female population. Mean hospital stay was 6 days in our study. Most of the
cases were reported in rainy season and treated conservatively (50.7%), very least genetic predisposition (0.4%)
was observed in the study population. Study results were similar when compared with other studies conducted
in India and abroad.

Author Biographies

  • K Srinivasulu

    Professor and HOD. Department of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology, Malla Reddy Institute of
    Medical Sciences, Suraram, Telangana

  • A Manmadha Kishan

    Associate Professor, Department of General Surgery, Malla Reddy Institute of Medical Sciences, Suraram, Hyderabad, Telangana

  • Nikhitha Puvvala

    Internee, Department of Forensic medicine and toxicology, Malla Reddy Institute of Medical Sciences, Suraram, Hyderabad, Telangana

  • Boinpally Ruchitha

    Internee, Department of Forensic medicine and toxicology, Malla Reddy Institute of Medical Sciences,
    Suraram, Hyderabad, Telangana

  • Nakkala Supraja

    MBBS, Mediciti Institute of Medical sciences, Hyderabad, Telangana

  • Butta Ramesh

    Assistant Professor and Statistician Dept of community Medicine, Malla Reddy Institute of Medical
    Sciences, Suraram, Hyderabad, Telangana

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Published

2023-09-26

How to Cite

A Socio-demographic and Clinical Study on Surgical Cases in a Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital, Suraram, Hyderabad. (2023). Indian Journal of Public Health Research & Development, 14(4), 101-106. https://doi.org/10.37506/ijphrd.v14i4.19766