Abstract. Background. In 2018 NICE produced their guidelines with regards to the prevention of hospital-acquired thrombosis which extended the age range to include 16- and 17-years old patients, suggesting that these patients are risk assessed and receive thromboprophylaxis if indicated. We analysed the incidence of VTE in this age group in our institution and found it to be extremely low and often not related to risk factors commonly included in adult
Falls and fall-related injuries can have devastating health consequences and form a growing economic burden for the healthcare system. To identify individuals at risk for preventive measures and therapies, fall
The ATTUNE™ Knee System (DePuy Synthes) comprises of a tibial insert that is made from AOX™, an antioxidant-stabilized polyethylene. The antioxidant used in AOX is pentaerythritol tetrakis [3-(3, 5-di-tertiary butyl-4-hydroxyphenyl)] propionate (PBHP). A biological
Aim: to determine the proportion of patients with fragility fractures who underwent
Patients with hip fracture are at high risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE). Chemical thromboprophylaxis with low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) is associated with a risk of major bleeding in certain patient groups, such as those with renal failure. In these patients, unfractionated heparin should be used. Our aim was to determine the practice of VTE
Boys affected by Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) often develop significant scoliosis in the second decade of life and require scoliosis surgery. Our aim was to establish whether cardiac MRI (CMR) improves the preoperative
We aimed to audit the results of one stop fragility fracture
To explore a novel machine learning model to evaluate the vertebral fracture risk using Decision Tree model and train the model by Bone Mineral Density (BMD) of different compartments of vertebral body. We collected a Computed Tomography image dataset, including 10 patients with osteoporotic fracture and 10 patients without osteoporotic fracture. 40 non-fracture Vertebral bodies from T11 to L5 were segmented from 10 patients with osteoporotic fracture in the CT database and 53 non-fracture Vertebral bodies from T11 to L5 were segmented from 10 patients without osteoporotic fracture in the CT database. Based on the biomechanical properties, 93 vertebral bodies were further segmented into 11 compartments: eight trabecular bone, cortical shell, top and bottom endplate. BMD of these 11 compartments was calculated based on the HU value in CT images. Decision tree model was used to build fracture prediction model, and Support Vector Machine was built as a compared model. All BMD data was shuffled to a random order. 70% of data was used as training data, and 30% left was used as test data. Then, training prediction accuracy and testing prediction accuracy were calculated separately in the two models. The training accuracy of Decision Tree model is 100% and testing accuracy is 92.14% after trained by BMD data of 11 compartments of the vertebral body. The type I error is 7.14% and type II error is 0%. The training accuracy of Support Vector Machine model is 100% and the testing accuracy is 78.57%. The type I error is 17.86% and type II error is 3.57%. The performance of vertebral body fracture prediction using Decision Tree is significantly higher than using Support Vector Machine. The Decision Tree model is a potential
Introduction:. NICE guidelines state that every patient should be assessed for their VTE risk on admission to hospital. The aim of this study was to determine whether currently recommended
Introduction. Reducing readmissions after total joint arthroplasty (TJA) is challenging. Pre-operative risk stratification and optimization pre surgical care may be helpful in reducing readmission rates after primary TJA. Assessment of the predictive value of individual modifiable risk factors without a tool to properly stratify patients may not be helpful to the surgical community to reduce the risk of readmission. We developed a scoring system: Readmission
There is an ongoing controversy whether the observed benefit of infection risk reduction by ALBC outweighs the risk of possible antimicrobial resistance development. The scientific & clinical literature in PubMed, Medline and Embase has been systematically reviewed with the keywords “antibiotic resistance”, “antibiotic loaded bone cement”, “local antibiotics”, “bacterial colonization” and “joint infection”. In total 28 relevant publications were found with the majority of them reporting laboratory results. Only 7 papers focused on clinical septic situations & patient dataAim
Methods
Objectives: The view that patients low back pain presenting with ‘abnormal’ psychometric and poor DRAM scores predict an unsatisfactory surgical outcome is considered controversial. This prospective study was designed to identify if DRAM Scores (Scores of Distress
The view that patients low back pain presenting with ‘abnormal’ psychometric and poor DRAM scores predict an unsatisfactory surgical outcome is considered controversial. This prospective study was designed to identify if DRAM Scores (Scores of Distress
The prevention of osteoporotic fractures is a global problem. Key to this strategy is efficient identification of ‘at risk’ patients in order to address the osteoporosis pandemic, including the identification of previously sustained fractures. GP practices are now integrating touch screens as a method of registering patients' attendance for an appointment, so all ages of patients are becoming familiar with this channel of communication. Our touch screen patient administered questionnaire system intends to provide an effective solution. The Virtual Research Integration Collaboration (VRIC) framework supports the integration of basic science and clinical research. It enables the management of research lifecycles by integrating scientific approaches with everyday work practice in a virtual research environment (VRE). ‘Catch Before a Fall’ (CBaF) is a clinical research project using VRIC, using a dedicated interface, co-designed by orthopaedic surgeons and basic scientists, adapted for sensory and IT impaired subjects to capture such information, since approximately 75% of registered over 65 year olds visit their GP each year.Background and objectives
Methods
There is a need for a standardised guideline to assist in optimal decision-making in diabetics who have acquired an ankle fracture. Through a critical analysis of the literature, a diagnostic and management algorithm that incorporates a quantitative scoring system is proposed and presented for consideration. Publications were identified by conducting a comprehensive keyword search of Medline, EMBASE and CINAHL databases. Search terms included “diabetes,” “ankle,” and “fracture”. Articles published in the English language that were pertinent to the topic were included. Manual search of the references in these relevant papers were also completed to further identify publications for potential inclusion. Publications and conferences not published in the English language or not pertinent to the topic in the above databases were excluded. Duplicate results that occurred in different databases were truncated to a single result.Introduction
Methods
Surgeons must explain the risk of complications to prospective patients and get informed consent. If a complication that occurred was omitted in the process or given the wrong risk level, culpability of the surgeon is judged in court against what a “reasonable patient” would like to know to give or refuse consent. ObjectivesThe concept “reasonable patient” is widely used, no attempt has been made to define it objectively. We assessed insight of patients, presumed “reasonable”, about risks of certain complications after they underwent one of five orthopaedic procedures. Questionnaire was administered with procedures: femur IMN, tibia IMN, ankle ORIF, distal radius ORIF and hip arthroplasty. Four common/serious complications were chosen per procedure, and matched against life events with documented risk levels. There were 230 participants 163 males and 67 females. We found 19.1% of patients above age 40 and 33.3% with tertiary education wouldn't accept nerve injury as reported in literature. With infection risk, 18.1% above 40 and 52.9% with pre-tertiary education would not accept. All patients below 40 and 7.4% pre-tertiary education wouldn't accept the risk of death as reported. However, 37.1% above 40 and 76.9% with pre-tertiary education would accept that risk at a higher level. It is hard to predict what risk of complication a patient may accept. This study highlights that some patients will not accept risks as reported in literature, even though they need the procedure. Therefore, surgeons need to explain complications fully, so that patients knowingly accepts or refuses consent. The subset of patients who are not willing to accept any level of risk, should be the subject of another study.
The aim of this study was to identify factors independently associated with symptomatic venous thromboembolism (VTE) following acute Achilles tendon rupture (ATR), and to suggest a clinical VTE
Osteoarthritis (OA) of the hip is the most common indication for total hip replacement (THR). Obesity is a risk factor for the development of OA and has recently resulted in patients requiring THRs at much younger ages to relieve pain at the joint capsule and restore mobility. However, the impact of obesity on THR mortality is not well understood. An updated systematic review was performed to identify whether an obese BMI should influence patient selection for surgery. Specifically, the impact of obesity on short-term mortality, long-term mortality, and peri- and post-operative complications was assessed with a particular focus on BMI classes. A comprehensive literature search of Ovid Medline and EMBASE in November 2022 identified relevant papers in accordance with PRISMA methodology. After removing duplicates, 2988 articles underwent strict inclusion and exclusion criteria, resulting in 12 papers for analysis. There was no statistically significant difference in mortality risk between obese and non-obese populations. Obesity was associated with a lower risk of short-term mortality than in the normal weight control group, however there was an increased mortality risk in obese patients long-term likely due to comorbidities. Obese patients were significantly younger than normal BMI and underweight patients. However, the paper found increased mortality risk in underweight and morbidly obese patients. Obese patients did not have an increased risk of mortality when compared to non-obese patients following THR. Obesity may have a protective effect on mortality up to a BMI of 40kg/m2, although this may be influenced by the obesity paradox which states only the healthiest obese individuals are selected for surgery, which could attribute to a lower mortality risk. The greatest risk of mortality and complication was associated with underweight patients. As a result, a BMI greater than 30kg/m2 may not necessitate a hip replacement contraindication. It is important surgeons apply careful consideration and comprehensive