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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 66 - 66
1 Feb 2017
Chen Z Zhou Z Pei F
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Objective. To investigate the effectiveness of applying fast track surgery concept in primary total hip arthroplasty. Methods. The data of patients with primary total hip arthroplasty in our department from January 1, 2013 to October 1, 2015 were retrospectively analyzed. The patients were divided into traditional recovery group, enhanced recoverygroup and update enhanced recovery group according to different interventions. The blood loss, transfusion rate, complications rate, postoperative function, length of stay, hospitalization expense and readmission rate were compared between three groups. Results. A total of 435 cases were included. Compared with traditional recovery group, the average blood loss, length of stay and total cases of complication in update enhanced recovery group were reduced 91.44 ml, 1.34 days and 14.05%, respectively, and the differences showed statistical significance. From 2013 to 2015 the hip flexion and abduction degree increased annually, the differences also showed statistical significance. The blood transfusion rate, other complications and hospitalization expense were all reduced, but there were no statistical significance. Conclusions. The emphasis of fast track surgery concept in primary total hip arthroplasty was the management in perioperative period. Through continuous optimization of intervention measures under the guidance of evidence based medicine, it can effectively accelerate recovery, diminish complications and reduce the length of hospital stay


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 41 - 41
1 Dec 2022
Konstantinos M Leggi L Ciani G Scarale A Boriani L Vommaro F Brodano GB Gasbarrini A
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Recently, there is ongoing evidence regarding rapid recovery after orthopaedic surgery, with advantages for the patient relative to post operative pain, complications and functional recovery. The aim of this study is to present our experience in rapid recovery for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis in the last 2 years.

Retrospective study of 36 patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis, (age range 11 to 18 years) treated with spinal thoraco-lumbar posterior fusion with rapid post-operative recovery, compared with a similar group, treated with traditional protocol.

We found a statistically significant difference in terms of length-of-stay, patient-controlled-analgesia and use of oppioid and post operative blood transfusions. There was no difference in post operative infection rate.

Our experience shows better functional recovery, satisfactory controlled analgesia and reduction in costs of hospitalization with the use of ERAS protocols.


Anterior Cruciate Ligament injuries are a common cause of downgrade in Service personnel. The Multidisciplinary Injury Assessment Clinic (MIAC) is a service which patients can be referred to for expert musculoskeletal injury management. MIAC has a Fast Track (FT) referral system in place for imaging, and can subsequently refer isolated ACL injuries to a private provider for reconstruction. We examined this pathway in the South West region which has an overall population at risk of 19775. Over 4 years 173 knee injuries were referred to MIAC, of which 32 were ACL injuries. Of the 29 patients referred for MRI, the median time to imaging was 8 days with FT (n=13, range 2–14) and. 15 days via the NHS (n=16, range 5–64). The majority of injuries were found to involve multiple pathologies (n=19), excluding them from FT surgery. Time to NHS clinic from point of referral took a median time of 54 days, and onward delay to surgery was 47 days. None of the referrals to the private provider for reconstruction were accepted (n=3). We have identified aspects of current referral and treatment pathways that are inefficient and discuss a current solution utilising Military surgeons


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 97-B, Issue 10_Supple_A | Pages 40 - 44
1 Oct 2015
Thienpont E Lavand'homme P Kehlet H

Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is a major orthopaedic intervention. The length of a patient's stay has been progressively reduced with the introduction of enhanced recovery protocols: day-case surgery has become the ultimate challenge.

This narrative review shows the potential limitations of day-case TKA. These constraints may be social, linked to patient’s comorbidities, or due to surgery-related adverse events (e.g. pain, post-operative nausea and vomiting, etc.).

Using patient stratification, tailored surgical techniques and multimodal opioid-sparing analgesia, day-case TKA might be achievable in a limited group of patients. The younger, male patient without comorbidities and with an excellent social network around him might be a candidate.

Demographic changes, effective recovery programmes and less invasive surgical techniques such as unicondylar knee arthroplasty, may increase the size of the group of potential day-case patients.

The cost reduction achieved by day-case TKA needs to be balanced against any increase in morbidity and mortality and the cost of advanced follow-up at a distance with new technology. These factors need to be evaluated before adopting this ultimate ‘fast-track’ approach.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2015;97-B(10 Suppl A):40–4.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 95-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1587 - 1594
1 Dec 2013
Ibrahim MS Twaij H Giebaly DE Nizam I Haddad FS

The outcome after total hip replacement has improved with the development of surgical techniques, better pain management and the introduction of enhanced recovery pathways. These pathways require a multidisciplinary team to manage pre-operative education, multimodal pain control and accelerated rehabilitation. The current economic climate and restricted budgets favour brief hospitalisation while minimising costs. This has put considerable pressure on hospitals to combine excellent results, early functional recovery and shorter admissions.

In this review we present an evidence-based summary of some common interventions and methods, including pre-operative patient education, pre-emptive analgesia, local infiltration analgesia, pre-operative nutrition, the use of pulsed electromagnetic fields, peri-operative rehabilitation, wound dressings, different surgical techniques, minimally invasive surgery and fast-track joint replacement units.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2013;95-B:1587–94.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 10 - 10
1 Oct 2022
Dunstan E Dixon M Wood L
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Introduction. Degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) is associated with progressive neurological deterioration. Surgical decompression can halt but not reverse this progression. The Modified Japanese Orthopaedic Assessment (MJOA) tool is recommended by international guidelines to grade disease severity into mild, moderate and severe, where moderate and severe are both recommended to undergo surgical intervention. During Covid-19 Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust, identified DCM patients as high risk for sustaining permanent neurological damage due to surgical delay. The Advanced Spinal Practitioner (ASP) team implemented a surveillance project to evaluate those at risk. Methods. A spreadsheet was compiled of all DCM patients known to the service. Patients were telephoned (Oct-Nov 2021) by an ASP. MJOA score was recorded and those describing progressive deterioration were reviewed by the ASP team on a spinal same day emergency assessment unit. Incident forms were completed for clinical deterioration and recorded as severe harm. Acute, progressive neurological deterioration was fast tracked for emergency surgical decompression. Results. 45 patients were telephoned, 18 (40%) had deteriorated. Of the 18, 9 underwent urgent surgical decompression, 6 still await surgery and 3 continue to be monitored. Those who had deteriorated were sent a formal apology and duty of candour letter. Conclusion. It appears that patients with a diagnosis of DCM deteriorate over time. Delays to timely surgical intervention can have a deleterious effect on patient's neurological function. Baseline assessment should be clearly documented and scoring system such as MJOA considered for effective monitoring. Safety netting for deterioration should be standard practice, and a clear pathway for emergency presentation identified. Conflicts of interest: No conflicts of interest. Sources of funding: No funding obtained


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 42 - 42
1 Apr 2022
Guichet J Chekairi A Stride M
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Introduction. The Patient's Dream is not to stay in hospital even overnight, including in limb lengthening. We developed the ‘Hyper Fast Track Protocol’ (HFTP) in 2015 to fasten recovery and shorten hospital stay. Materials and Methods. The protocol included surgical stab incisions, use of weight bearing lengthening nails (G-Nail), intramedullary saw, a specific anaesthesia care (blood hypo-pressure, tranexamic acid, low hydration), absence of early anticoagulants, systematic vascular US controls, but early motion (hip and knee Ext/Fle, leg raise, horizontal ‘scissors’), walking, stairs, bike, clicking (maneuvers to lengthen), early discharge, along with other patient's parameters. Timing and exercises reps were registered. Protocols improved over time. Means ± SD are computed. Results. Forms were analysed in 112 patients (unilateral 7, dwarfism 2, cosmetic 103). Besides patients operated in the afternoon (18), physio sessions initiated (h:mm) in average 0:46 ± 0:19 after awakening in operative room, for a duration of 2:15 ± 0:46. No DVT was noted on US nor clinically. In 2016, hospitalisation averaged 2.88 nights, decreasing to 2.07 in 2017, then to 1.07 from 2020. In late 2020 and in 2021, we had several patients in Daycare only, even in bilateral lengthening. In late 2021, we could discharge a patient after walking, full motion and exercises 3.5 hours after awakening from bilateral surgery. Conclusions. With continuous result monitoring and constant improvement of Care, walking, stairs, clicks and biking are fully feasible within 3h of surgery awakening, with discharge on the same day, using specific protocols


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 1 - 1
1 Jan 2017
Reeder I Lipperts M Heyligers I Grimm B
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Introduction: Physical activity is a major outcome in total hip arthroplasty (THA) and discharge criterion. Increasing immediate post-op activity may accelerate discharge, enable fast track surgery and improve general rehabilitation. Preliminary evidence (O'Halloran P.D. et al. 2015) shows that feedback via motivational interviewing can result in clinically meaningful improvements of physical activity. It was the aim of this study to use wearable sensor activity monitors to provide and study the effect of biofeedback on THA patients' activity levels. It was hypothesized that biofeedback would increase in-hospital and post-discharge activity versus controls. Methods: In this pilot study, 18 patients with osteoarthritis receiving elective primary THA followed by a rapid recovery protocol with discharge on day 3 after surgery (day 0) were randomized to the feedback group (n=9, M/F: 4:5, age 63.3 ± 5.9 years, BMI 26.9 ± 5.1) or a non-feedback control group (n=9, M/F: 0:9, age 66.9 ± 5.1 years, BMI 27.1 ± 4.0). Physical activity was measured using a wearable sensor and parameters (Time-on-Feet (ToF), steps, sit-stand-transfers (SST), mean cadence (steps/min)) were calculated using a previously validated algorithms (Matlab). For the in-hospital period data was calculated twice daily (am, ca. 8–13:00h and pm, ca. 13–20:00h) of day 1 (D1) and 2 (D2). The feedback group had parameters reported back twice (morning, lunch) using bar charts comparing visually and numerically their values (without motivational instructions) to a previously measured reference group (n=40, age 71 ±7 years, M:F 16:24) of a conventional discharge protocol (day 4/5). Activity measures continued from discharge (D3) until day 5 (D5) at home. Results: Randomization resulted in matched groups regarding age and BMI, but not gender. The first post-op activity assessment (D1am) was identical between groups. Also thereafter similar values with no significant differences in any parameter were seen, e.g. the time-on-feet at D2PM was 59.2 ±31.7min (feedback) versus 62.9 ±39.2min (controls). Also on the day of discharge and beyond, no effect from the in-hospital feedback was measured. For both groups the course of activity recovery showed a distinct drop on day 4 following a highly active day of discharge (D3). On day 5, activity levels only recovered partially. For both groups, all quantitative activity parameters were significantly higher than the reference values used for feedback. Only cadence as a qualitative measure was the same like reference values. Discussion: Biofeedback using activity values from a body-worn monitor did not increase in-hospital or immediate post-op home activity levels compared to a control group when using the investigated feedback protocol. In general, while the day of discharge steeply boosts patient activity, the day after at home results in an activity drop to near in-patient levels before discharge. In a fast track surgery protocol, it may be of value to avoid this drop via patient education or home physiotherapy. Biofeedback using activity monitors to increase immediate post-op activity for fast track surgery or improved recovery may only be effective when feedback goals are set higher, are personalised or have additional motivational context


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_IX | Pages 83 - 83
1 Mar 2012
Michla Y de Penington J Duggan J Muller S
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Introduction. Tranexamic acid (TXA) reduces total knee replacement (TKR) & total hip replacement (THR) blood loss. We launched a ‘fast track’ protocol to reduce inpatient stay including a single 15mg/kg dose of TXA. We conducted a retrospective cohort analysis on haemoglobin balance and transfusion requirement before and after the protocol, which aimed to reduce blood loss during lower limb arthroplasty. Methods. Patients undergoing primary cemented THR or TKR were drawn from the periods: control 1/10/06 to 31/3/07; fast track 1/4/08 -31/7/08. We identified pre- and post-operative Day 1 haemoglobin concentration (Hb g/dl), and transfusion number & timing. Transfusion trigger was Hb<8 unless symptomatic. In patients transfused before the Day 1 assay, we corrected Hb drop for number of units given, (1 unit ≍ 1g/dl). Outcome measures are Day 1 Hb drop corrected for transfusion (t-test) and number transfused (Chi-squared). Results. We excluded 3 patients pre-operatively. All patients had pre-operative Hb & all apart from 9 (excluded) fast track patients had Day 1 Hb assay. Conclusions. Correcting Hb drop for transfusion gives a single measure of blood loss independent of clinical management. The protocol demonstrated reduced blood loss of about 50% in TKR and 30% in THR, and reduced transfusion rates. Other studies show comparable reductions using maintenance dosing. A single dose of 15mg/Kg TXA before incision is as effective. The fast track protocol reduced in-patient stay from 5.5 to 2.3 days. Reduction in peri-operative blood loss may make an important contribution to recovery


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_30 | Pages 30 - 30
1 Aug 2013
Sciberras NC Russell D McMillan J
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Frail patients with neck of femur fracture, amongst other medical problems, are frequently fast-tracked to orthopaedic wards to meet government A&E waiting time targets. This is a second cycle of audit since 2008 examining the safety of fast-tracking following individual critical incidents. Data was collected prospectively between March and June 2011 by the first on-call orthopaedic doctor. 56 patients (12 male), average age 81.2y (50–97) were fast tracked. 52 were correctly referred as intra/extracapsular fracture, however 4 did not have a neck of femur fracture. 9 patients were transferred with no verbal referral to the receiving orthopaedic doctor. On arrival to the ward, 8 patients were found to have abnormal observations and acute medical problems requiring immediate review from the physicians. There were a total of 150 omissions from a total of 456 points from the fast track protocol. Vital observations of patients fast-tracked after 2100h were worse (MEWS range 0 to 11) when compared with those fast-tracked prior to 2100h (MEWS range 0 to 3). This occurs at a time when medical staff support is minimal. Fast-tracking is a common practice amongst many district-general and some teaching hospitals in Scotland. These data support concerns from orthopaedic surgeons highlighting a need for more complete initial assessment and management in A&E prior to transfer to the ward. Recent evidence suggests medical optimisation of the multiple acute and chronic medical comorbidities common amongst patients with neck of femur fracture is the main facilitator of early surgery which significantly reduces post-operative mortality


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 15 - 15
1 May 2018
Thomas R Myatt R Hemingway R Stanning A
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Recruits undergoing arduous training at Commando Training Centre Royal Marines (CTCRM) carry a higher risk of femoral neck stress fractures than many other military populations. This injury has serious sequelae and requires urgent operative fixation if it is displaced. Existing literature advocates a low threshold for imaging patients where this injury is suspected, due to the prognostic advantage conferred by early intervention. CTCRM uses a locally produced scoring system based on history and clinical assessment, to guide the requirement for imaging. Since 2015 access to MRI has been possible through a fast track provider. Between 2012 and 2015, 3522 Royal Marine Recruits entered training. Over the period, 95 MRI scans of the hip were performed, of which 12 utilised private pathways. 13 stress fractures of the femoral neck were identified; 23% (n=3) were displaced and required fixation. The overall incidence rate for this injury is therefore 37 per 10,000, with a displaced incidence rate of 9 per 10,000. We compare these data with previous studies, discuss the use and efficacy of the scoring tool, and assess the benefit conferred by the local private MRI agreement


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 84-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 147 - 147
1 Jul 2002
Mulholland R
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Three developments in the last 10 to 15 years have made it necessary to review how we ensure rapid access to treatment of patients with disabling low back pain. Firstly, there would appear to be an increase in the numbers of patients seeking medical help for low back pain, whether due to increased patient expectation, or better reporting, or a true increase associated with the increasing sedentary nature of life, is uncertain. Secondly, there is the realisation that amongst the factors that encourage acute back pain to become chronic is being off work, and the sooner a diagnosis and treatment is started the more likely that chronicity will be prevented, so a long waiting time to be seen in a clinic is productive of disability. Thirdly, reorganisation of consultant services has created the spinal surgeon, who in return for being allowed to practice spinal surgery almost exclusively undertakes the load of patients referred with back pain, amongst whom lurk those with a surgically remediable problem. The effect has been that although waiting times for general orthopaedic patients have dropped, as general orthopaedic, or other specialist orthopaedic surgeons no longer see spinal cases, the specialist spinal surgeon is overwhelmed by a large group of patients with back pain for whom there is not a surgical solution. Unfortunately, there is a shortage of spinal surgeons, which is likely in the UK at any rate to get worse. Being overwhelmed with non-surgical back pain interferes with their ability to deal with surgical problems. It also does create a recruitment problem, as back pain is not seen as a rewarding or satisfying problem to treat. Triage is a method of screening patients into groups at an early stage, identifying those who might benefit from surgery, and fast tracking them, identifying those who will benefit from other management and tracking them accordingly. Pioneered in general orthopaedics by Robin Ling in Exeter, it has been developed in the hospital setting somewhat randomly, by dedicated enthusiasts, many of whom will be speaking today. The purpose of this meeting today is to hear about the various systems, their funding and organisation and location, the triage staff used, the investigations used in primary triage and the effect on hospital specialist waiting times, the safety and patient satisfaction. Is a multiplicity of systems best, is one better than another, why have some units achieved no waiting times for MRI, and others six months etc?. In 1994, the Clinical Standards Advisory Group produced two books, An epidemiological Review, largely the work of Gordon Waddell, and a second book on Back Pain, chaired by Professor Michael Rosen with, I suspect, considerable input from Professor Waddell and others. Many of us met them when they toured the country collecting facts about the treatment and management of back pain. It discusses back pain triage, and suggests that it can be done within the average GP Consultation time of 9 minutes. It deals with simple back ache, “red flags”, (we now have “yellow flags” denoting the psycho-social factors) nerve root pain, cauda equina and inflammatory disorders. It is to be noted that chronic back pain, is not alluded to in the diagnostic triage, but it is stated that 90% of simple back ache recovers in six weeks. Their management guidelines emphasise the value of physical therapy (manipulation and active exercises), but it will be noted that they are addressed to a group of patients, 90% of whom will recover in six weeks. Sadly, therefore, the effect of this very sensible document, in ignoring in the triage system the chronic patient, has in many cases directed therapy in general practice towards open access for patients who in any event will improve spontaneously. We must therefore address where triage should be, hospital, or GP level. Certainly a GP gatekeeper will remove the acute back pains that are going to get better soon anyway from attending hospital and in certain units, a separate fast track is provided for acute radicular problems (Acute Sciatic Clinics). Any successful triage system involving chronic back pain must be associated with treatment possibilities, and I shall briefly discuss these, although the main thrust of the afternoon will be the triage organisation itself. The session is designed to allow considerable audience participation, as it is hoped that information, comments and criticisms from the audience will allow us to subsequently produce a booklet, hopefully with support from our Professional Societies, describing what we feel is Best Practice in Back Pain Triage, which we hope, after appropriate circulation, will encourage Trusts and Community Health Groups to develop such units and ensure that back pain patients get a better deal


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 61 - 61
1 Dec 2015
De Hei KK Voss A Koëter S
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A Prosthetic Joint infection (PJI) is an orthopedic disaster. There is a direct correlation between persistent wound drainage (>72 hours) and the development of a PJI. It is unknown if early wound drainage (<12 hours) is correlated with PJI. We included 753 consecutive patients treated with a Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) or Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) operated between December 2012 and December 2013. All patients were treated according to our local fast track joint surgery protocol. We retrospectively analyzed the prospectively collected data on wound drainage and PJI. The diagnosis PJI was established according to the definition by the International Consensus Group on Prosthetic Joint Infections. Per PJI-case, two control-cases were matched on type of surgery (THA or TKA) and day of surgery. Analysed variables were co-morbidities, medication, use of drains, haematoma, wound drainage and dressing changes. Statistical analysis was done using Kaplan Meier logistic regression with statistic significance set at p<0.005. In 753 included patients, 25 PJI-cases were identified and 50 controls were matched. Cases had significant more wound drainage (88% vs 36% P=0.001)) and wound dressing changes (56% vs 18% P=0.006) in the direct postoperative phase (<12 uur postoperative). Cases had more haematoma (44% vs 10% P=0.005). We found no association between PJI and co-morbidity, medication and use of drains. We found that wound drainage directly postoperative (<12hr) correlated with PJI. We believe that direct post operative drainage is of crucial importance in the development of PJI and inhibition of drainage offers opportunities for prevention of PJI. The use of tranexamic acid, suction drains and critical evaluation of guidelines for preventing thrombo embolic events all offer reducing the risk on wound drainage and the development of PJI


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_20 | Pages 69 - 69
1 Nov 2016
Beausejour M Brousselle A Breton M Eshiemokhai M Saran N Labelle H Parent S Mac-Thiong J Ouellet J
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Referral patterns in spine clinic of young patients with suspected scoliosis is suboptimal with 19% of late referrals and 42% of inappropriate referrals. Patients' triage and prioritisation in spine clinic is a strategy to ensure that health care allocation is done according to the level of health needs, favoring effective management and efficient use of health care resources use. The objective of the study is to elaborate a model for triage and prioritisation of young patients in spine clinic based on expert consensus and literature on best practices. This projects was structured in three parts: 1)We documented best evidence. We conducted a review of empirical studies evaluating triage and prioritisation initiatives in order to identify key components for intervention success. 2)We elaborate a model of health care delivery with the professionals of a local paediatric spine clinic. In this model, the triage and prioritisation algorithm was developed from list of potential factors (demographics, signs and perceived symptoms, provisional diagnoses and known co-morbidities, results of preliminary physical examination and radiological findings) that was submitted to five paediatric orthopaedic surgeons for rating according to their potential relevance to orient prioritisation decisions. 3) We compared the professionals' model of health care delivery to the literature synthesis in order to propose the best model. Seven key components of triage and prioritisation systems were identified: centralised review of referral requests, list of consensual objectives criteria for triage, fast track evaluation of urgent cases, selection of cases for management at point of triage, cases prioritisation to main consultant, multidisciplinary evaluation and alternatives pathways. The consensual decision algorithm confirmed that cases who should be seen in priority are immature patients presenting with a significant trunk deformity. In addition, presence of persisting neurological symptoms, severe incapacitating pain or night pain, as well as abnormal scan or MRI findings were considered as urgent/PI priority. Cases characteristics for evaluation by nurse practitioners as well as alternative pathways of management were defined. Acceptability, compatibility, clinical relevance and discriminant capacity of the new model of health care delivery were satisfactorily demonstrated. Consensus was easily reached between the five respondents on factors supporting decisions to prioritise patients in spine clinic for suspected spinal deformity. Refinements to the initially proposed model according the identified key features from the literature, led to a final model of health care delivery that is evidence-base, feasible and coherent with the local context. Future implementation of this model should facilitate timely and appropriate health care delivery and best use of health care resources according to patients' needs


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 96 - 96
1 Jan 2016
Vasarhelyi E Vijayashankar RS Lanting B Howard J Armstrong K Ganapathy S
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Introduction. Fast track arthroplasty regimens require preservation of motor power to perform early rehabilitation and ensure early discharge (1). Commonly performed nerve blocks like femoral and Sciatic nerve blocks results in motor weakness thereby interfering with early rehabilitation and may also predispose to patient falls (2, 3). Hence, targeting the terminal branches of the femoral and sciatic nerves around the knee joint under ultrasound is an attractive strategy. The nerve supply of interest for knee analgesia are the terminal branches of the femoral nerve, the genicular branches of the lateral cutaneous nerve of thigh, obturator and sciatic nerves (4). Methods. We modified the performance of the adductor canal block and combined it with US guided posterior pericapsular injection and lateral femoral cutaneous nerve block to provide analgesia around the knee joint. The femoral artery is first traced under the sartorius muscle until the origin of descending geniculate artery and the block is performed proximal to its origin. A needle is inserted in-plane between the Sartorius and rectus femoris above the fascia lata and 5 ml of 0.5% ropivacaine (LA) is injected to block the intermediate cutaneous nerve of thigh. The needle is then redirected to enter the fascia of Sartorius to deliver an additional 5ml of LA to cover the medial cutaneous nerve of thigh following which it is further advanced till the needle tip is seen to lie adjacent to the femoral artery under the Sartorius to perform the adductor canal block with an additional 15–20 ml of LA to cover nerve to vastus medialis, saphenous nerve and posterior division of the obturator nerve (Fig 1). The lateral cutaneous nerve of thigh is optionally blocked with 10 ml of LA near the anterior superior iliac spine between the origin of Sartorius and tensor fascia lata (Fig 2). The terminal branches of sciatic nerve to the knee joint is blocked by depositing 25 ml of local anesthetic solution between the popliteal artery and femur bone at the level of femoral epicondyles (Fig 3). Results. The initial experience of the block performed on 10 patients reveal the median (IQR) block duration is noted to be around 20 (±6.5) hours. The median (IQR) pain scores in the first 24 postoperative hours ranged from 0 (±0.5) to 3 (±2.5) at rest and 1.5 (±3.5) to 5.5 (±1) on movement. All patients were successfully mobilized on the morning of the first postoperative day. Conclusion. Motor sparing from the blocks while providing adequate analgesia can be achieved by selectively targeting the sensory innervation of the knee joint. Future comparative studies are needed to evaluate the performance of the block against other modes of analgesia for knee arthroplasty


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 34 - 34
1 Jan 2013
van der Sluis G Bimmel R Goldbohm R Garre FG Elings J Hoogeboom T van Meeteren N
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Objectives. The goal of this study was to describe and evaluate the implementation of a tailored care pathway as an alternative to a standard joint care protocol in the postoperative in-hospital rehabilitation after total knee replacement (TKR) on clinically relevant outcome parameters. Methods. We monitored an orthopaedic department regarding postoperative rehabilitation after TKR on several outcome parameters throughout a period of 32 months, whilst introducing a new care pathway after 17 months. Outcome parameters were monitored and comprised: Time to get functionally recovered (in days), length of stay (in days) and destination of discharge. Key-differences between the joint care protocol and the new tailored pathway were: 1. determination of individual short term rehabilitation goals on the basis of a preoperative clinical prediction rule and postoperative monitoring of functional recovery, 2. Enhancement of expertise of and collaboration between health care professionals and 3. implementation of fast track rehabilitation. We compared the patients operated after implementation of the tailored care pathway with those who were treated according to the joint care protocol. Regression analysis was used to estimate differences between the two groups of patients while correcting for baseline differences in risk profile between the groups. Results. Introduction of the tailored care pathway decreased the length of stay on average from 5.2 days to 4.2 days, (p< 0.01). In addition, there was a 7% non-statistically significant reduction in the number of patients who required inpatient rehabilitation after hospital discharge. Conclusion. Introduction of the tailored care pathway reduced the mean length of stay by one day, whilst patient safety and satisfaction remained unaltered


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 194 - 194
1 Jan 2013
Manning W Mannan S Inman D
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Background. Arthroplasty requires an interdisciplinary multimodal approach with anaesthetists playing a key role; providing stable intra-operative conditions, allowing rapid patient recovery, optimising analgeisa and minimizing side-effects. The incidence of post-operative urinary retention (POUR) varies significantly in joint arthroplasty (10–84%). Current literature quotes lower doses of opioids have been shown to reduce POUR, however studies consistently show spinal opioids influence bladder function causing urinary retention. Existing literature fails to comment upon the rate of POUR following joint arthroplasty comparing intrathecal diamorphine against intrathecal local anaesthetic (ITLA) within a modern fast track arthroplasty system (FTA). Methods. A two-year (2009–11) retrospective analysis was conducted encompassing a multi-surgeon duel-centre review. Rates of POUR were compared when utilising ITLA and multimodal analgesia including local anaesthetic infiltration (LIA) (site A) against ITLA in combination with intrathecal diamorphine (site B) for joint arthroplasty under spinal analgesia. Outcomes were analysed using 30-day POUR rates coding data and cross-referenced against patient records. Information was collected on patient co-morbidity, age, gender, surgery duration and renal function. Patients were excluded for previous POUR, prostate pathology, postoperative PCA, and conversion to general anaesthetic. Results. 2343 patients underwent joint arthroplasty within this period. At Site A 12 episodes of POUR were identified, whilst 71 were identified at site B. After exclusions, 56 cases underwent analysis. All had a clinical and radiological diagnosis of POUR. The study participants' mean age was 71 years, BMI 27.9 (range 20–47) and 96% were male. Patients across both sites had comparable co-morbidities. All patients at site B had intrathecal morphine with 96% having 3 micrograms of diamorphine. 30-day POUR rates at Site A (ITLA and LAI) were 1.2% and Site B (ITLA and intrathecal morphine) 5.4% (p=0.0001). Conclusion. The absence of intrathecal diamorphine in spinal anaesthesia significantly reduces the rates of POUR in patients undergoing joint arthroplasty


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 313 - 313
1 Jul 2011
Mallick E Radhikant P Furlong A
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Background: Delay in operative fixation of neck of femur fracture is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Apart from medical reasons, inadequate facilities or poor organization has also shown to delay neck of femur fracture patients going to theatre. Methods: In the year 2005, the Orthopaedic Directorate of University Hospitals of Leicester formed a fractured neck of femur project group to look at achieving a mean 48 hour wait (from clinical fitness to surgery) for this group to get to theatre. The salient changes effected by the group included assigning a dedicated fractured neck of femur ward where patients can be fast tracked from A & E. A dedicated half-day theatre hip list 7 days a week was instituted staffed by senior anaesthetist and surgeons. Ortho geriatricians were designated for each day to pre- and post-operatively assess fractured neck of femur patients and optimize their medical condition. The number of Trauma Coordinators and clinical aides were increased to provide 7 days a week cover. Also various services were integrated and specialist discharge coordinator assigned for early discharge. These measures were implemented from June 2006. Results: As a result of these measures the mean time to theatre of fit fractured neck of femur patients increased from 35% in 2005 to 75% in 2007 and 90% for the first 6 months of 2008. The mortality decreased from 18.5% in 2005 to 13.2% in 2007 and 9.3% for first 6 months of 2008. 28.7% of patients were deemed unfit for surgery in 2005. This figure dropped to 6 – 7% in the following years. Also percentage of patients staying longer in hospital decreased from 30.5% in 2005 to 13.4% in 2008. Conclusion: Reorganisation of available resources leads to better service provision and decreased mortality rate in fractured neck of femur patients


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 36 - 36
1 Jan 2011
Eardley W Stewart M
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Shoulder Instability impacts on the ability of military personnel to fulfil their operational role and maintain sporting competence. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and Arthrogram (MRA) are increasingly available as diagnostic adjuncts. We analysed MR reports from personnel undergoing stabilisation, correlating clinical diagnosis with operative findings and reviewed the literature in order to recommend improvements. We report a retrospective, consecutive case note analysis of 106 personnel undergoing open anterior capsulolabral reconstruction (ACLR) by a single surgeon. Seventy patients had MR (48 MRA, 22 MRI). Commonly reported pathology included Hill Sachs Lesions (41%), Soft tissue (59%) and bony Bankart lesions (16%), capsular laxity (20 %), supraspinatus lesion (20%), ACJ disease (13%) and SLAP tear (12%). The sensitivity of MR for identification of labral lesions was 82% with a specificity of 86%. For bony glenoid lesions, sensitivity was 63% and specificity 94%. Disparity between report and operative findings occurred mainly in standard MRI. Patients with lesions unrelated to instability achieved a pain free functioning shoulder following stabilisation. 100% of patients referred for ACLR with clinical evidence of instability without MR had positive pre-operative and operative correlation with instability. In 5 cases, the original equivocal MRI was repeated by MRA due to clinical suspicion of instability. In all cases the repeat MRA correlated with pre-operative and operative findings of instability. In 5 cases with equivocal clinical findings, MRA provided confirmation of instability. Delay in referral due to scanning and follow up ranged from 0 – 15 weeks. The diagnosis of those instigating referral is accurate. Reporting of MR is open to variation and has cost implications. MRA performed by a radiologist with a musculoskeletal specialist interest is recommended on an individual basis only and routine use of non-arthrographic studies should be discontinued. This will improve the efficiency of the fast track pathway


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 499 - 499
1 Sep 2009
Eardley W Jarvis L Stewart M
Full Access

Shoulder Instability impacts on the ability of military personnel to fulfil their operational role and maintain sporting competence. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and Arthrogram (MRA) are increasingly available as diagnostic adjuncts. We analysed MR reports from personnel undergoing stabilisation, correlating clinical diagnosis with operative findings and reviewed the literature in order to recommend improvements. This was a retrospective, consecutive case note analysis of 106 personnel undergoing open anterior capsulolabral reconstruction (ACLR) by a single surgeon. 70 patients had MR (48 MRA, 22 MRI). Commonly reported pathology included Hill Sachs Lesions (41%), Soft tissue (59%) and bony Bankart lesions (16%), capsular laxity (20 %), supraspinatus lesion (20%), ACJ disease (13%) and SLAP tear (12%). The sensitivity of MR for identification of labral lesions was 82% with a specificity of 86%. For bony glenoid lesions, sensitivity was 63% and specificity 94%. Disparity between report and operative findings occurred mainly in standard MRI. Patients with lesions unrelated to instability achieved a pain free functioning shoulder following stabilisation. 100% of patients referred for ACLR with clinical evidence of instability without MR had positive pre-operative and operative correlation with instability. In 5 cases, the original equivocal MRI was repeated by MRA due to clinical suspicion of instability. In all cases the repeat MRA correlated with pre-operative and operative findings of instability. In 5 cases with equivocal clinical findings, MRA provided confirmation of instability. Delay in referral due to scanning and follow up ranged from 0–15 weeks. The diagnosis of those instigating referral is accurate. Reporting of MR is open to variation and has cost implications. MRA performed by a radiologist with a musculoskeletal specialist interest is recommended on an individual basis only and routine use of non-arthrographic studies should be discontinued. This will improve the efficiency of the fast track pathway