The fingers and thumb are the second most common site for dislocation of joints following injury (3.9/10,000/year). Unlike fractures, the pattern and patient reported outcomes following dislocations of the hand have not previously been reported. All patients presenting with a dislocation or subluxation of the fingers or thumb were included in this cohort study (November 2008 and October 2009). Patient demographic and injury data were obtained and dislocation pattern confirmed on radiographs. Patient reported outcomes were obtained using the Michigan Hand Outcome Questionnaire (MHQ). There were 202 dislocations/subluxations recorded. MHQ scores were obtained at 3–5 years for 74percnt; patients. The average age at injury was 40 years, 76percnt; (146) patients were male and 11percnt; (23) injuries were open. 50percnt; (101) of the dislocations were dorsal, 28percnt; (57) were associated with fractures and 4percnt; (9) were recurrent. There were significant associations between: 1, Direction of dislocation and finger involved (p=0.03); 2, Joint and mechanism of dislocation (p=0.001); 3, Mechanism and direction of dislocation (p=0.008). Older patients had significantly worse outcomes (p<0.001). This is the first study to assess the epidemiology and patient reported outcomes following dislocation of the fingers and thumb allowing us to better understand these injuries.
Open or closed fracture of the tibial shaft is a common injury. There is no long-term outcome data of patients after tibial shaft fracture utilising modern treatment methods. This study assessed pain and function of 1509 consecutive patients with a tibial shaft fracture at 12–22 years following injury. Secondary outcomes included: effect on employment, effect of social deprivation, necessity for hardware removal and comparative morbidity following fasciotomy. Prospective study of 1509 consecutive adult patients with a tibial shaft fracture (1990–1999) at a high-volume trauma unit. 1034 were male, and the mean age at injury was 40 years. Fractures were classified according to AO, and open fractures graded after Gustillo and Anderson. Time to fracture union, complication rate, hardware removal and incidence of anterior knee pain were recorded. Employment and assessment of social deprivation were detailed. Function was assessed at 12 to 22 years post injury using the Short Musculoskeletal Functional Assessment and Short Form 12 questionnaires. 87% of fractures united without further intervention. Social deprivation was associated with higher incidence of fracture and poorer functional and economic outcomes. 11.5% patients underwent fasciotomy which correlated with poorer long-term outcome. Tibial shaft fracture had high mortality in the elderly. At long-term follow-up 25% of patients have anterior knee pain and 20% ankle discomfort after IM nailing. This is the largest and longest study assessing functional and economic outcomes of tibial shaft fracture. This is the first paper to describe ankle pain following tibial IM nailing at long-term follow-up.
That fracture callus with overlying muscle crush would contain raised expression of acute inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α). That application of locally applied blocking antibodies to these inflammatory cytokines might negate excessive cytokine release and modulate fracture healing in this model.
Injection of anti-TNF-α antibodies into MC mice caused more new bone formation on day 16 (p=0.03) and day 24 (p=0.06), stiffer calluses at day 24 (p=0.01) and faster fracture gap obliteration at day 16 (p=0.05) and day 24 (p=0.001). IL-1β blockade had slightly less effect, more new bone formationd ay 16 (p=0.01) and day 24 (p=0.03), slightly stiffer (p=0.08), but no significant difference in fracture gap obliteration from controls.