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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 58 - 58
1 Mar 2021
Dehghan N Nauth A Schemitsch E Vicente M Jenkinson R Kreder H McKee M
Full Access

Unstable chest wall injuries have high rates of mortality and morbidity. These injuries can lead to respiratory dysfunction, and are associated with high rates of pneumonia, sepsis, prolonged ICU stays, and increased health care costs. Numerous studies have demonstrated improved outcomes with surgical fixation compared to non-operative treatment. However, an adequately powered multi-centre randomized controlled study using modern fixation techniques has been lacking. We present a multi-centred, prospective, randomized controlled trial comparing surgical fixation of acute, unstable chest wall injuries with the current standard of non-operative management. Patients aged 16–85 with a flail chest (3 or more consecutive, segmental, displaced rib fractures), or severe deformity of the chest wall, were recruited from multiple trauma centers across North America. Exclusion criteria included: severe pulmonary contusion, severe head trauma, randomization>72 hours from injury, inability to perform surgical fixation within 96 hours from injury (in those randomized to surgery), fractures of the floating ribs, or fractures adjacent to the spine not amendable to surgical fixation. Patients were seen in follow-up for one year. The primary outcome was days free from mechanical ventilation in the first 28 days following injury. Secondary outcomes were days in ICU, rates of pneumonia, sepsis, need for tracheostomy, mortality, general health outcomes, pulmonary function testing, and other complications of treatment. A sample size of 206 was required to detect a difference of 2 ventilator-free days between the two groups, using a 2-tailed alpha error of 0.05 and a power of 0.80. A total of 207 patients were recruited from 15 sites across Canada and USA, from 2011–2018. Ninety-nine patients were randomized to non-operative treatment, and 108 were randomized to surgical fixation. Overall, the mean age was 53 years, and 75% of patients were male, with 25% females. The commonest mechanisms of injury were: motor vehicle collisions (34%), falls (20%), motorcycle collisions (14%), and pedestrian injuries (11%). The mean injury severity score (ISS) at admission was 26, and patients had a mean of 10 rib fractures. Eighty-nine percent of patients had pneumothorax, 76% had haemothorax, and 54% had pulmonary contusion. There were no differences between the two groups in terms of demographics. The final results will be available and presented at the COA meeting in Halifax. This is the largest randomized controlled trial to date, comparing surgical fixation to non-operative treatment of unstable chest wall and flail chest injuries. The results of this study will shed light on the best treatment options for patients with such injuries, help understand outcomes, and guide treatment. The final results will be available and presented at the COA meeting in Halifax


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 69 - 69
1 Mar 2012
Giannoudis P Kanakaris N Bouamra O Tsiridis E Lecky F
Full Access

Introduction. The aim of this study was to investigate the differences between open vs closed femoral fractures with regard to the epidemiology, classification and outcome. Patients & methods. Data collected prospectively from MTOS and TARN-UK. Between 2001 and 2005, 67,665 trauma patients found and 8,591 were identified having sustained femoral shaft fractures. Demographics, pre and in-hospital data were recorded. The AIS and ISS were calculated. Outcomes and mortality rates were recorded. Four groups of patients were identified namely isolated/open (IO), polytrauma/open (PO), isolated /closed (IC), polytrauma/closed (PC). ANOVA analysis was contacted to determine the effect of fracture classification and severity of trauma to mortality using SPSS 11.0 software. Results. 7,978 patients having full data were included. There were 6,780 (85%) Isolated and 1,198 (15%) Polytrauma femoral fractures. When looking at Open vs Closed fractures we found 786 (9.8%) and 7,192 (90.2%) respectively. Combining the groups we recorded 502 IO, 6,278 IC, 284 PO, 914 PC. The median age was 53.9 years, the male/female ratio was 1.15 and the median ISS was 9. Males predominantly presented with open fractures with age distribution prevalence between 16-44 years. Elderly females >74 presented prevalence in IC fractures. Polytrauma related fractures had over six times higher mortality rates than isolated ones. A trimodal distribution of death was confirmed. The incidence of immediate deaths (<1h) was 23.3% for PO vs the 17% of PC fractures. Isolated closed fatalities were in 55.7% late deaths (>1st week), mostly attributed to hospitalisation and late post-injury complications. Conclusions. Young males predominate in this musculoskeletal entity. Elderly females present prevalence of closed fractures vs elderly males possibly due to osteoporosis. Open femoral fractures have a higher mortality rate as they represent high energy absorption. The combination of multiple trauma and femoral fractures shows higher mortality rates at all age groups


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 1, Issue 9 | Pages 541 - 548
8 Sep 2020
MacDonald DRW Neilly DW Davies PSE Crome CR Jamal B Gill SL Jariwala AC Stevenson IM Ashcroft GP

Aims

The UK government declared a national lockdown on 23 March 2020 to reduce transmission of COVID-19. This study aims to identify the effect of lockdown on the rates, types, mechanisms, and mortality of musculoskeletal trauma across Scotland.

Methods

Data for all musculoskeletal trauma requiring operative treatment were collected prospectively from five key orthopaedic units across Scotland during lockdown (23 March 2020 to 28 May 2020). This was compared with data for the same timeframe in 2019 and 2018. Data collected included all cases requiring surgery, injury type, mechanism of injury, and inpatient mortality.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 1, Issue 5 | Pages 137 - 143
21 May 2020
Hampton M Clark M Baxter I Stevens R Flatt E Murray J Wembridge K

Aims

The current global pandemic due to COVID-19 is generating significant burden on the health service in the UK. On 23 March 2020, the UK government issued requirements for a national lockdown. The aim of this multicentre study is to gain a greater understanding of the impact lockdown has had on the rates, mechanisms and types of injuries together with their management across a regional trauma service.

Methods

Data was collected from an adult major trauma centre, paediatric major trauma centre, district general hospital, and a regional hand trauma unit. Data collection included patient demographics, injury mechanism, injury type and treatment required. Time periods studied corresponded with the two weeks leading up to lockdown in the UK, two weeks during lockdown, and the same two-week period in 2019.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1561 - 1565
1 Nov 2014
Park JW Kim YS Yoon JO Kim JS Chang JS Kim JM Chun JM Jeon IH

Non-tuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) infection of the musculoskeletal tissue is a rare disease. An early and accurate diagnosis is often difficult because of the indolent clinical course and difficulty of isolating pathogens. Our goal was to determine the clinical features of musculoskeletal NTM infection and to present the treatment outcomes. A total of 29 patients (nine females, 20 males between 34 and 85 years old, mean age 61.7 years; 34 to 85) with NTM infection of the musculoskeletal system between 1998 to 2011 were identified and their treatment retrospectively analysed. Microbiological studies demonstrated NTM in 29 patients: the isolates were Mycobacterium intracellulare in six patients, M. fortuitum in three, M. abscessus in two and M. marinum in one. In the remaining patients we failed to identify the species. The involved sites were the hand/wrist in nine patients the knee in five patients, spine in four patients, foot in two patients, elbow in two patients, shoulder in one, ankle in two patients, leg in three patients and multiple in one patient. The mean interval between the appearance of symptoms and diagnosis was 20.8 months (1.5 to 180). All patients underwent surgical treatment and antimicrobial medication according to our protocol for chronic musculoskeletal infection: 20 patients had NTM-specific medication and nine had conventional antimicrobial therapy. At the final follow-up 22 patients were cured, three failed to respond to treatment and four were lost to follow-up. Identifying these diseases due the initial non-specific presentation can be difficult. Treatment consists of surgical intervention and adequate antimicrobial therapy, which can result in satisfactory outcomes.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014;96-B:1561–5.