There were 70000 people admitted to hospital with fractured hips in 2007 and the incidence is rising by 2% each year. Hip fractures represent significant morbidity and mortality to patients and cost the NHS £1.8 billion annually. In 2008 the British Orthopaedic Association Standards for Trauma (BOAST) issued a 14-point guideline to be followed for the management of hip fractures. The aim was to improve secondary prevention of osteoporosis, reduce the falls risk and further fractures. This aimed to provide better care to improve the outcomes for patients and reduce the burden of hip fractures on society. The aim of the audit was to see if the
Aim. The primary aim of this quality improvement project was to assess compliance with
Introduction. Lower limb open fractures are severe injuries, with a joint orthoplastic approach for management recommended by BOAST. An initial audit highlighted a discrepancy in time to definitive wound coverage between the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (QEUH), which at the time was not an orthoplastic centre, and the Glasgow Royal Infirmary (GRI) which was. Our aim was to perform a secondary audit to identify if the introduction of an orthoplastic service at the QEUH led to a reduction in time to definitive wound coverage. Materials and Methods. Forty-six patients with open lower limb fractures treated at the QEUH in 2019 following introduction of the orthoplastic service were identified. Management including time to antibiotics and wound coverage, and rates of complication were compared with previous audit data. Results. Days to washout was similar between the second cohort of QEUH patients and the first (p=0.522), as was days to definitive management without plastics input (p=0.143). When plastics input was required, there was a reduction in days to wound coverage in the second cohort of QEUH patients compared to the first (3 days vs 8.5 days; p=0.002), and a similar time if compared to the GRI cohort (p=0.778). Conclusions. Time to definitive wound coverage was reduced in those that required plastics input in the second cohort of QEUH patients, with a similar time to that of the original GRI cohort. The QEUH now displays improved concordance with the
All skeletally immature patients who presented with a supracondylar fracture between 01/09/2013 and 24/11/2015 (n = 50) were used to compare the current management of supra-condylar fractures of the humerus in children to the standards set by the
Introduction. A significant burden of disease exists with respect to critical sized bone defects; outcomes are unpredictable and often poor. There is no absolute agreement on what constitutes a “critically-sized” bone defect however it is widely considered as one that would not heal spontaneously despite surgical stabilisation, thus requiring re-operation. The aetiology of such defects is varied. High-energy trauma with soft tissue loss and periosteal stripping, bone infection and tumour resection all require extensive debridement and the critical-sized defects generated require careful consideration and strategic management. Current management practice of these defects lacks consensus. Existing literature tells us that tibial defects 25mm or great have a poor natural history; however, there is no universally agreed management strategy and there remains a significant evidence gap. Drawing its origins from musculoskeletal oncology, the Capanna technique describes a hybrid mode of reconstruction. Mass allograft is combined with a vascularised fibula autograft, allowing the patient to benefit from the favourable characteristics of two popular reconstruction techniques. Allograft confers initial mechanical stability with autograft contributing osteogenic, inductive and conductive capacity to encourage union. Secondarily its inherent vascularity affords the construct the ability to withstand deleterious effects of stressors such as infection that may threaten union. The strengths of this hybrid construct we believe can be used within the context of critical-sized bone defects within tibial trauma to the same success as seen within tumour reconstruction. Methodology. Utilising the Capanna technique in trauma requires modification to the original procedure. In tumour surgery pre-operative cross-sectional imaging is a pre-requisite. This allows surgeons to assess margins, plan resections and order allograft to match the defect. In trauma this is not possible. We therefore propose a two-stage approach to address critical-sized tibial defects in open fractures. After initial debridement, external fixation and soft tissue management via a combined orthoplastics approach, CT imaging is performed to assess the defect geometry, with a polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) spacer placed at index procedure to maintain soft tissue tension, alignment and deliver local antibiotics. Once comfortable that no further debridement is required and the risk of infection is appropriate then 3D printing technology can be used to mill custom jigs. Appropriate tibial allograft is ordered based on CT measurements. A pedicled fibula graft is raised through a lateral approach. The peroneal vessels are mobilised to the tibioperoneal trunk and passed medially into the bone void. The cadaveric bone is prepared using the custom jig on the back table and posterolateral troughs made to allow insertion of the fibula, permitting some hypertrophic expansion. A separate medial incision allows attachment of the custom jig to host tibia allowing for reciprocal cuts to match the allograft. The fibula is implanted into the allograft, ensuring nil tension on the pedicle and, after docking the graft, the hybrid construct is secured with multi-planar locking plates to provide rotational stability. The medial window allows plate placement safely away from the vascular pedicle. Results. We present a 50-year-old healthy male with a Gustilo & Anderson 3B proximal tibial fracture, open posteromedially with associated shear fragment, treated using the Capanna technique. Presenting following a fall climbing additional injuries included a closed ipsilateral calcaneal and medial malleolar fracture, both treated operatively. Our patient underwent reconstruction of his tibia with the above staged technique. Two debridements were carried out due to a 48-hour delay in presentation due to remote geographical location of recovery. Debridements were carried out in accordance with
St Mary's Hospital, the major trauma centre for West London, treated 168 patients with lower limb open fractures in 2011 & 2012. This audit compared antibiotic administration in the emergency department against the current
Aims. The BOA/BAPRAS guidelines for the management of open tibial fractures (2009) recommend early senior combined orthoplastics input and appropriate facilities to manage a high caseload. St Georges Hospital is one of four London Trauma Centres fulfilling these criteria. Our aim is to determine whether becoming a trauma centre has affected the management of patients with open tibial fractures. Methods. Data were obtained prospectively on consecutive open tibial fractures during two 8 month periods: before and after becoming a Major Trauma Centre (May 2009–Dec 2009 and April 2010–Oct 2010 respectively). Data on patient pathway including, admitting hospital, length of stay, timing and number of operations were recorded. Results. 29 open tibial fractures were admitted during the 8 months after designation as a major trauma centre compared to 15 before. 72% of patients came directly, or as A&E hot transfers (previously 60%). Of the eight tertiary transfers, six were from hospitals outside the South West Trauma Network. The time to transfer patients initially admitted to local orthopaedic departments has fallen from 8.6 to 1.6 days. Despite this improvement as a trauma centre, these patients remained in hospital longer (16.3 vs 14.9) and had more operations (3.7 vs 2.6) than direct admissions. As a trauma centre there were improvements in time to definitive skeletal stabilisation (4.7 to 2.2), skin coverage (8.3 to 3.7 days), average number of operations (4.2 to 2.3) and average length of hospital admission fell from 23 to 16 days. Conclusions. The volume and management of open tibial fractures has been directly affected by introduction of a trauma centre within the London Trauma Network. Implementation of