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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 24 - 24
1 May 2018
Iliopoulos E Agarwal S Khaleel A
Full Access

Purpose

Pilon fracture is a severe injury which has a great impact on the patients' lives, but in what extend is not clear yet in the literature. The purpose of this study was to investigate the gait alternations after treatment of patients who had pilon fractures.

Materials & Methods

We have evaluated the gait pattern of patients who were treated with circular Ilizarov frame following pilon fractures in our department. The gait was tested by using a force plate in a walking platform. Ground Reaction Forces (GRF) and timing of gait phases data were collected during level walking at self-selected speeds. The patients performed two walking tasks for each limb and the collected data were averaged for each limb. Demographic, clinical, radiological, trauma outcome (COST) and quality of life questionnaire (SF-12) data were also collected.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 32 - 32
1 May 2018
Iliopoulos E Ads T Trompeter A
Full Access

Introduction

Plate fixation for distal femoral fractures is a commonly used method of fracture stabilisation. Many orthopaedic surgeons traditionally do not allow their patients to weight bear for the first 6 weeks after surgery, fearing of loss of fracture reduction and metalwork failure. The aim of this study is to investigate whether the post-operative weight bearing status after plate fixation influences the outcome in terms of loss of reduction and metalwork failure.

Materials & Methods

A retrospective data collection from all patients who treated in our hospital surgically for distal femoral fractures, from January 2015 until June 2017. Inclusion criteria were the operative treatment of these fractures with plate fixation. Patients who were treated with retrograde nail, primary total knee replacement or screw fixation were excluded from the study. Patient, injury and surgery demographic data was collected. The immediate post-operative weight bearing status of these patients was noted. Weight bearing status was divided into two groups – Group 1 (Non and touch weight bear – the non-weight bearing group) and Group 2 (Weight bear as tolerated / Full weight bear – the weight bearing group). Radiological data about fracture displacement or metalwork failure was collected at the six weeks and three months follow up after the operation, using a standardised measurement for displacement performed independently by two authors (EI, TA).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 39 - 39
1 May 2018
Gee C Agarwal S Iliopoulos E Khaleel A
Full Access

Introduction

Anatomical reduction of articular fragments in tibial plateau fractures often leads to a void and there is a need to fill dead space and support the articular fragment. MIIG X3 is marketed as high strength injectable graft, which resorbs and remodels fast. Efficacy and complications related to the use of this bone graft substitute were evaluated in this study

Methods

Between January 2012 and December 2016 we injected calcium sulphate (MIIGX3) in 50 out of 126 consecutive complete articular (AO type C3) tibial plateau fractures that were stabilised with Ilizarov ring fixator. Postoperative CT scans after weight bearing and sequential radiographs were evaluated for union, graft resorption and subsidence. IOWA functional outcome score and complications were recorded.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 18 - 18
1 May 2018
Williamson M Iliopoulos E Jain A Ebied W Trompeter A
Full Access

Background

There exists no consensus opinion as to the most suitable post-operative rehabilitation and weight bearing status for proximal tibia articular fractures treated with internal fixation using plates and screws.

Objectives

The aim of this study is to investigate whether the post-operative weight bearing status is associated with loss of reduction and articular collapse.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_21 | Pages 2 - 2
1 Dec 2017
Agarwal S Iliopoulos E Khaleel A
Full Access

Aim

Anatomical reduction and Stable fixation of Lisfranc injuries is considered the gold standard. There is controversy about how it is best achieved. Some surgeons would advocate routine open anatomical reduction, which as a concept was popular in 1980s but the same anatomical reduction and fixation can be achieved percutaneously. We describe our method of close reduction and percutaneous fixation and present our results.

Materials and methods

22 patients with a minimum follow up of 12 months were included. We achieved satisfactory anatomical reduction percutaneously in all patients and internal fixation was performed using cannulated screws for medial and middle columns. Functional outcome was evaluated using Foot and Ankle Disability Index (FADI) and components of this score were analysed individually to assess which domain was most affected. Vertical ground reaction forces were measured using a force plate in a walking platform.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 3 - 3
1 Jun 2017
Iliopoulos E Agarwal S Gallagher K Khaleel A
Full Access

Purpose

Tibia plateau fractures are severe knee injuries which have a great impact on the patients' lives, but in what extend is not clear yet in the literature. The purpose of this study was to investigate the gait alternations after treatment of patients who had severe tibia plateau fractures which were treated with circular ilizarov frame.

Materials & Methods

We have evaluated the gait pattern of patients who were treated with circular Ilizarov frame after severe tibia plateau fractures (Schatzker IV-VI) in our department. The gait was tested by using a force plate in a walking platform. Ground Reaction Forces (GRF) data were collected during level walking at self-selected speeds. The patients performed two walking tasks for each limb and the collected data were averaged for each limb. Demographic, clinical, radiological and quality of life questionnaire (SF-12) data were also collected.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 2 - 2
1 Jun 2017
Iliopoulos E Agarwal S Khaleel A
Full Access

Introduction

Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) are used as outcome of many surgical treatments such as Hip and knee joint replacements, varicose vein and groin hernia surgery. Outcome scores in orthopaedics tend to be site and/or pathology specific. Trauma related pathology uses a surrogate outcome scores. A unified outcome score for trauma is needed to help with the measurement of outcomes in trauma patients and evaluate the actual impact that trauma inflicts to patients' lives.

Materials & Methods

We have designed a PROM especially for Trauma patients, in order to measure the extent of recovery to pre-injury state. This score uses as baseline the pre-injury status of the patient and has the aim to determine the percentage of rehabilitation after any form of treatment. This PROM is not site specific and can be used for every Trauma condition. It uses simple wording, user friendly and accessed via phone conversation.

The outcome score consists of eleven questions. The first ten questions use the 5-point Likert scale and the final question a scale from zero to ten. The questions are divided into three subgroups (Symptoms, Function and Mental status). The final question assesses the extent of return to pre-injury status.

The SF-12v2 questionnaire was used for the validation of the COST questionnaire. We gathered COST and SF-12v2 questionnaires from patients who were at the end of their follow-up after treatment for various trauma conditions, treated either conservatively either operatively.