We evaluated the outcome of treatment of nonunion
of an intracapsular fracture of the femoral neck in young patients
using two
Introduction and aim. Avascular necrosis (AVN) of femoral head remains a major post-operative complication of the surgical fixation of femoral neck fractures (#NOF). In order to reduce the incidence of AVN following this type of fracture, the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) has stated that fixation must occur within 6 hours. However, there is a paucity of information concerning whether time to fixation influences the development of AVN. The aim of the present study was to assess whether time to fixation affects the development of AVN in patients aged under 60 who had sustained a fracture (#)NOF. Methods. We looked retrospectively at 101 patients (61 female, 40 male aged under 60 (mean age 47 years) who were admitted to a multi-tertiary centre having sustained an intracapsular #NOF. The underlying co morbidity of the patient sample was varied, as was the mechanism of trauma, though in the majority of cases the cause was a simple fall. The time delay (TD) between the time of injury and the time of operation for each patient was determined. Results. 72 patients sustained an intracapsular displaced fracture and 29 an intracapsular undisplaced fracture. Of these, 33 patients were treated with a dynamic hip screw (DHS), 10 received a DHS plus a
Proximal femoral fractures remain the most common reason for admission to hospital following orthopaedic injury, with an annual cost of £1.7 billion to the National Health Service and social care services. Fragility fractures of the hip in the elderly are a substantial cause of mortality and morbidity. Revision surgery for any cause carries a higher morbidity, mortality, healthcare- and social economic burden. Which patients suffer failed surgery and the reasons for failure have not been established. The aim of this study was to determine which patients are at risk of failed proximal femoral fracture surgery, the mechanism and cause fo failed surgery and modifiable patient factors associated with failure of hip fracture surgery. From prospectively collected data of 795 consecutive proximal femoral fractures admitted between July 2007 and July 2008, all peri-operative and post-operative complications were identified. 55 (6.9%) patients were found to have developed a surgical complication requiring further intervention. Risk factors included younger age (p=0.01), smoking (p=0.01) and
Aims. Hip fractures in patients < 60 years old currently account for only 3% to 4% of all hip fractures in England, but this proportion is increasing. Little is known about the longer-term patient-reported outcomes in this potentially more active population. The primary aim is to examine patient-reported outcomes following isolated hip fracture in patients aged < 60 years. The secondary aim is to determine an association between outcomes and different types of fracture pattern and/or treatment implants. Methods. All hip fracture patients aged 18 to 60 years admitted to a single centre over a 15-year period were used to identify the study group. Fracture pattern (undisplaced intracapsular, displaced intracapsular, and extracapsular) and type of operation (multiple
We studied 60 patients with an acute displaced fracture of the femoral neck and with a mean age of 84 years. They were randomly allocated to treatment by either internal fixation with
To investigate health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of older adults (aged ≥ 60 years) after tibial plateau fracture (TPF) compared to preinjury and population matched values, and what aspects of treatment were most important to patients. We undertook a retrospective, case-control study of 67 patients at mean 3.5 years (SD 1.3; 1.3 to 6.1) after TPF (47 patients underwent fixation, and 20 nonoperative management). Patients completed EuroQol five-dimension three-level (EQ-5D-3L) questionnaire, Lower Limb Function Scale (LEFS), and Oxford Knee Scores (OKS) for current and recalled prefracture status. Propensity score matching for age, sex, and deprivation in a 1:5 ratio was performed using patient level data from the Health Survey for England to obtain a control group for HRQoL comparison. The primary outcome was the difference in actual (TPF cohort) and expected (matched control) EQ-5D-3L score after TPF.Aims
Methods
The aim of this study was to examine perioperative blood transfusion practice, and associations with clinical outcomes, in a national cohort of hip fracture patients. A retrospective cohort study was undertaken using linked data from the Scottish Hip Fracture Audit and the Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service between May 2016 and December 2020. All patients aged ≥ 50 years admitted to a Scottish hospital with a hip fracture were included. Assessment of the factors independently associated with red blood cell transfusion (RBCT) during admission was performed, alongside determination of the association between RBCT and hip fracture outcomes.Aims
Methods
Introduction. Pedicle screw pullout or loosening is increased in the osteoporotic spine. Recent studies showed a significant increase of pullout forces especially for PMMA-augmentation. With application of conventional viscosity PMMA the risk of cement extravasation is associated. This risk can be reduced by using radiofrequency-responsive, ultrahigh viscosity bone cement. Method. 11 fresh-frozen lumbar vertebral bodies (VB) from 5 cadavers were collected and freed from soft-tissue and ligaments. By DEXA scan (Siemens QDR 2000) 8 VB were identified as severely osteoporotic (BMD 0.8 g/cm3), 3 VB were above this level. Two screws (6×45 mm, WSI-Expertise Inject, Peter Brehm, Weisendorf, Germany) were placed in the pedicles. Through the right screw 3ml of radiofrequency-responsive bone cement (StabiliT® ER2 Bone Cement, DFine, Germany) were injected via hydraulic cement delivery system (StabiliT® Vertebral Augmentation System, DFine, Germany). As control group, left pedicle screws remained uncemented. After potting the whole VB in technical PMMA (Technovit 4004, Heraeus Kulzer, Germany) axial pullout test was performed by a material testing device (Zwick-Roell, Zmart-Pro, Ulm, Germany). Results. The mean BMD of all specimen was 0.771 g/cm3 (min./max. 0.615/1.116, SD ± 0.170). Due to the definition of osteoporosis 8 specimens had a BMD lower than 0.8 g/cm3 (mean 0.677, min./max. 0.615/0,730, SD ±0.045). The non-osteoporotic group consisted of 3 specimens with a mean BMD of 1.020 g/cm3 (min/max 0.928/1.116, SD ±0.094). Overall we observed an increase in the mean axial pullout strength of 284% when using cement augmentated screws (non-cemented 385 N vs. cemented 1029 N, p 0,001). In the osteoporotic group the mean pullout force of the non-cemented screws was 407 N vs. 1022 N for the cemented screws (p 0.001). Similarly the pullout force rose in the non-osteoporotic group from 325 N for the non-cemented screws to 1048 N for the cemented screws p 0,001). All surgical procedures could be performed without technical problems. Conclusion. This cadaver study demonstrates the efficacy and effectiveness of pedicle-screw augmentation with ultra-high viscosity cement. Pullout forces are significantly increased, especially in osteoporotic bone. No complications like clogged in cannulated pedicle-screws or extravasation of bone cement were observed. In daily clinical routine radiation exposure to operator during cement delivery is reduced due to remote-controlled, automated delivery of radiofrequency-responsive bone cement. Furthermore availability of longer time to work with the cement (up to 30 min) is achieved; hectically injection or multiple-cement-mixing is not necessary anymore. The WSI-Expertise
Factors associated with high mortality rates in geriatric hip fracture patients are frequently unmodifiable. Time to surgery, however, might be a modifiable factor of interest to optimize clinical outcomes after hip fracture surgery. This study aims to determine the influence of postponement of surgery due to non-medical reasons on clinical outcomes in acute hip fracture surgery. This observational cohort study enrolled consecutively admitted patients with a proximal femoral fracture, for which surgery was performed between 1 January 2018 and 11 January 2021 in two level II trauma teaching hospitals. Patients with medical indications to postpone surgery were excluded. A total of 1,803 patients were included, of whom 1,428 had surgery < 24 hours and 375 had surgery ≥ 24 hours after admission.Aims
Methods
We randomly allocated 60 consecutive patients with fractures of the waist of the scaphoid to percutaneous fixation with a
Simulation in surgical training has become a key component of surgical training curricula, mandated by the GMC, however commercial tools are often expensive. As training budgets become increasingly pressurised, low-cost innovative simulation tools become desirable. We present the results of a low-cost, high-fidelity simulator developed in-house for teaching fluoroscopic guidewire insertion. A guidewire is placed in a 3d-printed plastic bone using simulated fluoroscopy. Custom software enables two inexpensive web cameras and an infra-red led marker to function as an accurate computer navigation system. This enables high quality simulated fluoroscopic images to be generated from the original CT scan from which the bone model is derived and measured guidewire position. Data including time taken, number of simulated radiographs required and final measurements such as tip apex distance (TAD) are collected. The simulator was validated using a DHS model and integrated assessment tool. TAD improved from 16.8mm to 6.6mm (p=0.001, n=9) in inexperienced trainees, and time taken from 4:25s to 2m59s (p=0.011). A control group of experienced surgeons showed no improvement but better starting points in TAD, time taken and number of radiographs. We have also simulated
To assess the safety of tranexamic acid (TXA) in a large cohort of patients aged over 65 years who have sustained a hip fracture, with a focus on transfusion rates, mortality, and thromboembolic events. This is a consecutive cohort study with prospectively collected registry data. Patients with a hip fracture in the Region of Southern Denmark were included over a two-year time period (2015 to 2017) with the first year constituting a control group. In the second year, perioperative TXA was introduced as an intervention. Outcome was transfusion frequency, 30-day and 90-day mortality, and thromboembolic events. The latter was defined as any diagnosis or death due to arterial or venous thrombosis. The results are presented as relative risk (RR) and hazard ratio (HR) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs).Aims
Methods
This study sought to compare the rate of deep surgical site infection (SSI), as measured by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) definition, after surgery for a fracture of the hip between patients treated with standard dressings and those treated with incisional negative pressure wound therapy (iNPWT). Secondary objectives included determining the rate of recruitment and willingness to participate in the trial. The study was a two-arm multicentre randomized controlled feasibility trial that was embedded in the World Hip Trauma Evaluation cohort study. Any patient aged > 65 years having surgery for hip fracture at five recruitment centres in the UK was considered to be eligible. They were randomly allocated to have either a standard dressing or iNPWT after closure of the wound. The primary outcome measure was deep SSI at 30 and 90 days, diagnosed according to the CDC criteria. Secondary outcomes were: rate of recruitment; further surgery within 120 days; health-related quality of life (HRQoL) using the EuroQol five-level five-dimension questionnaire (EQ-5D-5L); and related complications within 120 days as well as mobility and residential status at this time.Aims
Methods
No randomized comparative study has compared the extensile lateral approach (ELA) and sinus tarsi approach (STA) for Sanders type 2 calcaneal fractures. This randomized comparative study was conducted to confirm whether the STA was prone to fewer wound complications than the ELA. Between August 2013 and August 2018, 64 patients with Sanders type 2 calcaneus fractures were randomly assigned to receive surgical treatment by the ELA (32 patients) and STA (32 patients). The primary outcome was development of wound complications. The secondary outcomes were postoperative complications, pain scored of a visual analogue scale (VAS), American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS) score, 36-item Short Form health survey, operative duration, subtalar joint range of motion (ROM), Böhler’s angle and calcaneal width, and posterior facet reduction.Aims
Methods
Echocardiography is commonly used in hip fracture patients to evaluate perioperative cardiac risk. However, echocardiography that delays surgical repair may be harmful. The objective of this study was to compare surgical wait times, mortality, length of stay (LOS), and healthcare costs for similar hip fracture patients evaluated with and without preoperative echocardiograms. A population-based, matched cohort study of all hip fracture patients (aged over 45 years) in Ontario, Canada between 2009 and 2014 was conducted. The primary exposure was preoperative echocardiography (occurring between hospital admission and surgery). Mortality rates, surgical wait times, postoperative LOS, and medical costs (expressed as 2013$ CAN) up to one year postoperatively were assessed after propensity-score matching.Aims
Methods
Osteopetrosis (OP) is a rare hereditary disease that causes reduced bone resorption and increased bone density as a result of osteoclastic function defect. Our aim is to review the difficulties, mid-term follow-up results, and literature encountered during the treatment of OP. This is a retrospective and observational study containing data from nine patients with a mean age of 14.1 years (9 to 25; three female, six male) with OP who were treated in our hospital between April 2008 and October 2018 with 20 surgical procedures due to 17 different fractures. Patient data included age, sex, operating time, length of stay, genetic type of the disease, previous surgery, fractures, complications, and comorbidity.Aims
Methods
We have carried out a prospective study of 17 patients (14 women, 3 men) of mean age 48 years (21 to 76) with transcervical fractures of the femur using MRI to detect early evidence of avascular necrosis of the head. Two fractures were Garden stage I, 12 stage II, and three stage III. We performed internal fixation under radiological control at a mean of five days (2 to 15) after injury using a titanium
Osseointegrated prosthetic limbs allow better mobility than socket-mounted prosthetics for lower limb amputees. Fractures, however, can occur in the residual limb, but they have rarely been reported. Approximately 2% to 3% of amputees with socket-mounted prostheses may fracture within five years. This is the first study which directly addresses the risks and management of periprosthetic osseointegration fractures in amputees. A retrospective review identified 518 osseointegration procedures which were undertaken in 458 patients between 2010 and 2018 for whom complete medical records were available. Potential risk factors including time since amputation, age at osseointegration, bone density, weight, uni/bilateral implantation and sex were evaluated with multiple logistic regression. The mechanism of injury, technique and implant that was used for fixation of the fracture, pre-osseointegration and post fracture mobility (assessed using the K-level) and the time that the prosthesis was worn for in hours/day were also assessed.Aims
Methods
This study explores data quality in operation type and fracture classification recorded as part of a large research study and a national audit with an independent review. At 17 centres, an expert surgeon reviewed a randomly selected subset of cases from their centre with regard to fracture classification using the AO system and type of operation performed. Agreement for these variables was then compared with the data collected during conduct of the World Hip Trauma Evaluation (WHiTE) cohort study. Both types of surgery and fracture classification were collapsed to identify the level of detail of reporting that achieved meaningful agreement. In the National Hip Fracture Database (NHFD), the types of operation and fracture classification were explored to identify the proportion of “highly improbable” combinations.Aims
Patients and Methods
The aim of this study was to compare the incidence of anterior knee pain after antegrade tibial nailing using suprapatellar and infrapatellar surgical approaches A total of 95 patients with a tibial fracture requiring an intramedullary nail were randomized to treatment using a supra- or infrapatellar approach. Anterior knee pain was assessed at four and six months, and one year postoperatively, using the Aberdeen Weightbearing Test – Knee (AWT-K) score and a visual analogue scale (VAS) score for pain. The AWT-K is an objective patient-reported outcome measure that uses weight transmitted through the knee when kneeling as a surrogate for anterior knee pain.Aims
Patients and Methods