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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 44 - 44
7 Aug 2024
Raghu A Kapilan M Ibrahim M Mushtaq S Sherief T
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Introduction. Most common osteoporotic fracture. 20-30% of patients with OVFs are presented to hospital while 2.2 million remain undiagnosed, as diagnosis is usually opportunistic. 66,000 OVFs occur annually in the UK with increase by 18,000 cases a year until 2025. 20% chance of another OVF in next 12 months and 3 times risk of hip fracture. Acute painful OVFs poorly tolerated by infirm elderly patients, leading to significant morbidity and 8 times increase in age-adjusted mortality. Materials and Methods. Classify fracture severity and patents with ovfs in 12-month period. To assess follow-up status and if kyphoplasty was offered within 6 weeks as per NICE guidelines. To introduce Royal Osteoporosis Society and GIRFT guidelines on management of symptomatic osteoporotic vertebral fractures. Results. Total no. of patients- 62. Initial pain assessment=40. Pain assessed at ≤6 weeks- 21. Duration from decision to operate to kyphoplasty 8.7 weeks. 11% had kyphoplasty of which 50% noted improvement in pain. 11 deaths. Nearly similar findings to NoSH study. Conclusion. To improve pain assessment on admission of patients with acute osteoporotic vertebral fractures. To follow GIRFT guidelines for early assessment and intervention in patients with acute osteoporotic vertebral fractures to improve pain, mobility and early discharge from hospital. Conflicts of interest. None. Sources of funding. None


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 4 - 4
7 Aug 2024
Draper-Rodi J Abbey H Brownhill K Vogel S
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Purpose and Background. Guidelines recommend biopsychosocial care for chronic, complex musculoskeletal conditions, including non-specific low back pain. The aims were: 1/ to assess how patients with low back pain respond to osteopathic treatment, both before and after an osteopath has completed a Biopsychosocial Pain Management (BPM) course; and 2/ to assess if it is feasible and acceptable for osteopath participants to receive weekly SCED data and use it to guide patient management. Methods and Results. A multiple baseline single case experimental design trial (. clinicaltrials.gov. , on 18/10/2021, ID number NCT05120921) with 11 UK osteopaths was conducted. Patients were randomised to early, middle or late treatment start dates. Statistical analysis assessed the change between baseline, intervention and follow-up periods. Primary outcomes were the Numeric Pain Rating (NPR) and Patient Specific Function Scales (PSFS), measured during the baseline, the 6-week intervention, and during a 12-week follow-up period. At baseline, the osteopaths reported stronger biopsychosocial attitudes to pain, compared to biomedical beliefs (PABS: 34 behavioural scale; 29 biomedical scale). Overall, patient participants showed daily increases in symptoms during the pre-treatment phase (+0.24/day, p<0.001), and daily decreases during treatment (−2.94 over the treatment phase, p<0.001), which continued post-treatment (−3.36 over 12 weeks, p=0.04). Similar improvements were observed for function. Conclusion. Osteopathic care was shown to help patients with persistent low back pain. Patient recruitment was challenging because of the randomisation. With further development, the method shows feasibility as a means of enhancing research activity among practising clinicians. Previous presentations or publications of the work. The protocol was published (. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijosm.2023.100660. ) and presented at SBPR in 2022. The results were presented to an osteopathic conference in October 2023. Ethics approval was received from the University College of Osteopathy Research Ethics Committee. Conflicts of interests. Jerry Draper-Rodi receives fees from the sales of the e-learning course on the biopsychosocial management on the UCO CPD platform. Sources of funding. The research was funded by the Osteopathic Foundation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 14 - 14
1 Sep 2021
Hashmi SM Hammoud I Ansar MN Golash A
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Introduction and Objective. Almost 60% of the population can expect to experience low back pain (LBP) during their life. Several radiological tools are used to investigate LBP. However, adequate evidence is unavailable to support the use of single photon emission computer tomography (SPECT) in patients with LBP. The objective of this study is to assess the role and efficiency of SPECT in evaluation and management of patients with LBP. Method. Ninety-two patients with LBP were examined and assessed. All the patients received a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan and were referred for a SPECT. We interpreted the modic and degenerative changes found on the MRI and compared it with SPECT tracer uptake. SPECT was used to identify the pain generator and then a surgical plan was made. Data was analyzed for pain improvement in those who underwent surgical treatment to establish the accuracy of CT SPECT in identification of primary pain generator. Results. A total of 184 patients were included in the study who underwent diagnostic CT-SPECT between January 2013 and December 2019. One hundred of them were females and Eighty four males; the mean age was 47.6 years. 111 patients underwent surgery in the form of interbody fusion or posterolateral fusion. 16 patients positive tracer uptake was at asymptomatic level or unrelated. In 3 patients SPECT identified screw sites as pain generator and in all 3 patients screws were removed with good pain relief. Overall axial pain as measured with Numeric rating scale was preoperatively 9.13 ± 0.7 and improved to 4.54 ± 2.3 at 6 months postoperative follow up. MRI changes have been analyzed and correlation studied with relation to SPECT findings. Conclusion. Due to its high precision and sensitivity compared to other radiological modalities, SPECT demonstrated the ability to aid in clinical diagnosis. CT SPECT reveals information that becomes vital in deciding further management. In this study, we exemplified that SPECT scan can give indication for pain generator in axial spine pain and aid in surgical intervention


Background. Osteopathy has been shown to be effective in the management of chronic low back pain. Guidelines recommend biopsychosocial care for chronic, complex musculoskeletal conditions, including non-specific low back pain but there is a lack of evidence comparing standard osteopathic care, which has traditionally been based on dated and disputed biomechanical theories of dysfunction, with more contemporary biopsychosocial approaches. Methods and results. A multiple baseline single case experimental design trial with 11 UK osteopaths and 60 patients is currently assessing effectiveness of osteopathic treatment for patients with non-specific low back pain of more than 12 weeks’ duration. Patients are randomised to early, middle, or late treatment start dates to increase the validity of inferences about the effects of treatment. Osteopaths have participated in one course on the study protocol and processes pre-participation and will take an e-learning course on the biopsychosocial management of patients with low back pain after the first patient recruitment stage. Statistical analysis will assess the degree and rate of change between baseline, intervention and follow-up periods, and whether differences in effect are observed after the osteopaths have completed the biopsychosocial patient management training course. Primary outcomes will be the Numeric Pain Rating and Patient Specific Function Scales, measured daily at baseline and for 6 weeks during the intervention stage, and weekly or fortnightly during a 12-week follow-up period. Conclusion. This experimental design will offer osteopaths in practice the opportunity to engage in research evaluating the effectiveness of osteopathic care and the influence of a training programme to augment biopsychosocial osteopathic care. Study registration: . https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05120921. Sources of funding: The Osteopathic Foundation. Conflict of interest: The authors declare no competing interests. Previous publication of work: This protocol is under review with a peer-reviewed journal


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 6 | Pages 671 - 676
1 Jun 2020
Giorgi PD Villa F Gallazzi E Debernardi A Schirò GR Crisà FM Talamonti G D’Aliberti G

Aims. The current pandemic caused by COVID-19 is the biggest challenge for national health systems for a century. While most medical resources are allocated to treat COVID-19 patients, several non-COVID-19 medical emergencies still need to be treated, including vertebral fractures and spinal cord compression. The aim of this paper is to report the early experience and an organizational protocol for emergency spinal surgery currently being used in a large metropolitan area by an integrated team of orthopaedic surgeons and neurosurgeons. Methods. An organizational model is presented based on case centralization in hub hospitals and early management of surgical cases to reduce hospital stay. Data from all the patients admitted for emergency spinal surgery from the beginning of the outbreak were prospectively collected and compared to data from patients admitted for the same reason in the same time span in the previous year, and treated by the same integrated team. Results. A total of 19 patients (11 males and eight females, with a mean age of 49.9 years (14 to 83)) were admitted either for vertebral fracture or spinal cord compression in a 19-day period, compared to the ten admitted in the previous year. No COVID-19 patients were treated. The mean time between admission and surgery was 1.7 days, significantly lower than 6.8 days the previous year (p < 0.001). Conclusion. The structural organization and the management protocol we describe allowed us to reduce the time to surgery and ultimately hospital stay, thereby maximizing the already stretched medical resources available. We hope that our early experience can be of value to the medical communities that will soon be in the same emergency situation. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2020;102-B(6):671–676


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 6 - 6
1 Aug 2022
Bada E Dwarakanath L Sewell M Mehta J Jones M Spilsbury J McKay G Newton-Ede M Gardner A Marks D
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Children undergoing posterior spinal fusion (PSF) for neuromuscular and syndromic scoliosis were admitted to the paediatric intensive care (PIC) until about 6 years ago, at which time we created a new unit, a hospital floor-based spinal high-dependency unit-plus (SHDU-plus), in response to frequent bed-shortage cancellations. This study compares postoperative management on PIC with HDU-plus for these non-hospital floor suitable children with syndromic and neuromuscular scoliosis undergoing PSF. Retrospective review of 100 consecutive children with syndromic and neuromuscular scoliosis undergoing PSF between June 2016 and January 2022. Inclusion criteria were: 1) diagnosis of syndromic or neuromuscular scoliosis, 2) underwent PSF, 3) not suitable for immediate postoperative hospital floor-based care. Exclusion criteria were children with significant cardio-respiratory co-morbidity requiring PIC postoperatively. 55 patients were managed postoperatively on PIC and 45 on SHDU-plus. No significant difference between groups was found with respect to age, weight, ASA grade, preoperative Cobb angles, operative duration, number of levels fused and estimated blood loss. 4 patients in the PIC group and 1 in the SHDU-plus group were readmitted back to PIC or HDU following step-down to the hospital floor. Average length of stay was 2 days on PIC and 1 day on SHDU-plus. Average total length of hospital stay was 16.5 days in the PIC group and 10.5 days in the HDU-plus group. 19 (35%) patients developed complications in the PIC group, compared to 18 (40%) in SHDU-plus. Mean specialist unit charge per day was less on SHDU-plus compared with PIC. There were no bed-shortage cancellations in the SHDU-plus group, compared to 11 in the PIC group. For children with neuromuscular or syndromic scoliosis undergoing PSF and deemed not suitable for post-operative care on the hospital floor, creation of a SHDU-plus was associated with fewer readmissions back to PIC or HDU, shorter hospital stays, an equivalent complication rate, significant cost-saving and fewer cancellations. Level of Evidence: Therapeutic Level III


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 8 - 8
1 Sep 2021
Abdalla M Nyanzu M Fenner C Fragkakis E Ajayi B Lupu C Bishop T Bernard J Willis F Reyal Y Pereira E Papadopoulos M Crocker M Lui D
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Introduction. Spine is a common site for haematological malignancies. Multiple myeloma affects the spine in 70% of cases. New guidelines were published in 2015 to help manage spinal haematological malignancies. Despite neural compression or spinal instability, instrumentation of the spine should be avoided. Surgery carries significant risks of wound complications and more importantly delaying the definitive chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Cement augmentation and bracing for pain and prevention of deformity is key to the new strategies. We aimed to evaluate the different treatment modalities adopted in the spine unit at St George's hospital for spinal haematological malignancies. We compared our practice to the current guidelines published in 2015. Methods. Retrospective review of all spinal haematological malignancy patients who were discussed in the spinal MDT and managed through the spine unit at St George's hospital in the period between April 2019 and February 2021. We analysed the demographics of the patients treated in this period and compared the management modalities adopted in the unit to the current British haematological guidelines. Results. 139 patients were included in this study, 61.9% of them were male. 70 cases came through the MSCC pathway. 15 patients had their spinal involvement in the lumbar spine only below the conus. The Bilsky Grades of the other 124 cases were B0: 35.97 % 1a: 4.31%%, 1b: 7.19%, 1c: 3.59%, 2: 5.75% 3: 32.37%. 43 patients (30.9 %) had neurological deficits on presentation. 70 cases were treated conservatively (50.35%), 21 were treated with brace only (15.1%), 25 had BKP (17.98%) and 23 were treated with instrumentation (16.54%). The number of instrumented cases was small and trending down and cement augmentation and bracing were more frequently chosen for these patients. This comes in accordance to the British haematological guidelines. Conclusion. Utilising BJH 2015 guidelines we have reduced our instrumented operative case load. There is a higher percentage of BKP and Bracing in accordance to the algorithm


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 17 - 17
1 Sep 2021
Sivasubramaniam V Fragkakis A Ho P Fenner C Ajayi B Crocker MJ Minhas P Lupu C Bishop T Bernard J Lui DF
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Introduction. Treatment of spinal metastatic disease has evolved with the advent of advanced interventional, surgical and radiation techniques. Spinal Oligometastatic disease is a low volume disease state where en bloc resection of the tumour, based on oncological principles, can achieve maximum local control (MLC). Hybrid therapy incorporating Separation surgery (>2mm clearance of the thecal sac) and Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy (SABR) offer an alternative approach to achieving MLC. Hybrid therapy is also a viable option in patients eligible for SBRT who have failed conventional radiation therapy. En-bloc surgery may be a suitable option for those patients who are ineligible for or have failed SBRT. A multidisciplinary approach is particularly important in the decision-making process for these patients. Metal free instrumentation is aiding the optimization of these surgeries. The authors present a supra-regional centre's experience in managing spinal oligometastases. Methods. Retrospective review of oligometastatic spinal disease at a supra-regional centre between 2017 and 2021. Demographics, operative course, complications and Instrument type are examined. Results. Demographics: 24 patients with mean age 53.8y (range 12–77), 44% (40y–59y), 40% (60y–69y); 51% Male. Histology: Breast, Renal and Sarcoma accounted for 16.7% each; Thyroid, Prostate and Chordoma accounted for 8.3% each. Primary disease 7%, Synchronous 15%, Metachronous 78%. Instrumentation: Carbon-fibre (85%), TiAl (11%), Non-Instrumented (3%). Separation Surgery (70%), En-bloc resection/Tomita surgery (30%); SABR/Proton Beam Planned: 70%. Average length of hospital stays 19.1 days; twenty patients required intensive care admission for an average 2.7 days. 30 Day Mortality 8.3% (n=2: COVID-19 during admission and ventriculitis post discharge), 1y Mortality – 16.7%, 3y Mortality – 25%; Synchronous Mortality 75% (n=3) at 3 years. 30 Day infection rate 3%; 1y infection rate 7%. 1 Non-instrumented case developed proximal junctional failure post proton beam therapy and required a vascularised fibular strut graft. 2-year Revision for Local Recurrence 5% (Revision at 23 months). Conclusion. There are very few case series of oligometastatic spinal disease due to the relatively new concept of adjuvant SABR and its limited availability. Solid tumours pre-dominated the histology in our series with metachronous disease being the most commonly operated disease state. 92% of cases were eligible for SABR. The majority (85%) of cases were performed with Carbon-fibre instrumentation and has been shown to be safe with no mechanical failures in this series. Infection rates are in keeping with patients requiring radical radiotherapy with 3% early and 7% late. 30-day mortality was 8.3%, 1y=16.7% and 25% at last follow up. Mortality, as expected, is highest within the synchronous disease group and should be operated on sparingly. With the current management strategy, there was no local recurrence at 1 year and excellent local recurrence rate at 2 years (5%). Although radical en bloc surgery carries significant morbidity, it should be considered in selective cases to achieve MLC. All Oligometastatic cases deserve extra consideration and specialist MDT as not all are suitable for SABR. Multimodal Hybrid therapy, incorporating less invasive surgical techniques and SABR, represents a paradigm shift in achieving MLC in oligometastatic spinal disease


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 44 - 44
1 Oct 2019
Watt T Abbott C Oxborrow N Siddique I Verma R Angus M
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Purpose. A Virtual Spinal Clinic (VSC) was set-up at a regional spinal referral centre to see if patient care could be improved through early advice to provide timely management, early onward referral, improve patient satisfaction and minimise chronicity. The clinic was based on the successful virtual model used throughout the country within orthopaedic fracture clinics. VSC is a Consultant led multi-disciplinary (MDT) clinic run by Advanced Practitioners (AP). Methods. A 3-month trial of the VSC was completed bi-weekly. Patients diagnosed with conservatively managed spinal fractures were referred from the on-call service. A management plan was devised by a Consultant Spinal Surgeon and communicated to patients by the AP via a telephone-call consultation where clinical advice and management could be discussed. Results. 23 clinics completed. 271 patient contacts. 216 reviewed virtually. Completed outcomes of VSC. 34.65% Discharged. 51.18% Routine appointment. 14.17% Urgent appointment. Conclusion. VSC successfully completed safe and timely assessments, management plans, telephone consultations and onward referrals for Greater Manchester patients with acute spinal fractures. Patients had earlier access to health professionals to provide advice, reassurance, complete onward referrals and safety-netting. Patient satisfaction improved, with patient reporting the telephone consultation was reassuring and allowed early return to previous function. VSC reduced patients waiting time for a follow-up appointment and reduced patients travel time across Greater Manchester. In the future, it is hoped that the 6-week follow-up telephone call service will be utilised more as VSC develops. No conflicts of interest. No funding obtained


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1115 - 1121
1 Sep 2019
Takenaka S Makino T Sakai Y Kashii M Iwasaki M Yoshikawa H Kaito T

Aims. The aim of this study was to explore risk factors for complications associated with dural tear (DT), including the types of DT, and the intra- and postoperative management of DT. Patients and Methods. Between 2012 and 2017, 12 171 patients with degenerative lumbar diseases underwent primary lumbar spine surgery. We investigated five categories of potential predictors: patient factors (sex, age, body mass index, and primary disease), surgical factors (surgical procedures, operative time, and estimated blood loss), types of DT (inaccessible for suturing/clipping and the presence of cauda equina/nerve root herniation), repair techniques (suturing, clipping, fibrin glue, polyethylene glycol (PEG) hydrogel, and polyglycolic acid sheet), and postoperative management (drainage duration). Postoperative complications were evaluated in terms of dural leak, prolonged bed rest, headache, nausea/vomiting, delayed wound healing, postoperative neurological deficit, surgical site infection (SSI), and reoperation for DT. We performed multivariable regression analyses to evaluate the predictors of postoperative complications associated with DT. Results. In total, 429/12 171 patients (3.5%) had a DT. Multivariable analysis revealed that PEG hydrogel significantly reduced the incidence of dural leak and prolonged bed rest, and that patients treated with sealants (fibrin glue and PEG hydrogel) significantly less frequently suffered from headache. A longer drainage duration significantly increased the incidence of headache, nausea/vomiting, and delayed wound healing. Headache and nausea/vomiting were significantly more prevalent in younger female patients. Postoperative neurological deficit and reoperation for DT significantly depended on the presence of cauda equina/nerve root herniation. A longer operative time was the sole independent risk factor for SSI and was also a risk factor for dural leak, prolonged bed rest, and nausea/vomiting. Conclusion. Sealants, particularly PEG hydrogel, may be useful in reducing symptoms related to cerebrospinal fluid leakage, whereas prolonged drainage may be unnecessary. Younger female patients should be carefully treated when DT occurs. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2019;101-B:1115–1121


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 41 - 41
1 Oct 2022
Kundu S Sims J Rhodes S Ampat G
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Background

BANDAIDE aka Back and Neck Discomfort relief with Altered behaviour, Intelligent Postures, Dynamic movement and Exercises (ISBN - 0995676933) is a concise self-help booklet containing strengthening exercises and illustrated information to enable patients self-manage their back and neck pain. The aim of this preliminary audit was to determine patient opinion on BANDAIDE. Institutional audit approval was obtained – No. 8429.

Methods and Results

BANDAIDE was distributed to 40 patients, who were asked to evaluate the booklet using the Usefulness Scale for Patient Information Material (USE). USE consists of nine positive statements which are subdivided into three sub-domains; cognition, emotional and behavioural. The cognition sub-domain assesses the knowledge obtained from the material, the emotional sub-domain evaluates the effects of the material on an individual's ability to cope with the illness and the behavioural sub-domain assesses ability to self-manage. Responders were required to rate the extent to which they agreed with each of the nine statements on a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 denotes ‘completely disagree’ and 10 denotes ‘completely agree’. Each subsection is on a scale of 0–30, with a higher score suggesting better usefulness. 23 participants provided their opinions of BANDAIDE through the USE. For the three sub-domains, the mean ratings for cognition, emotional and behavioural were 27.2, 24.7, and 26.4 respectively.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 94-B, Issue 2 | Pages 152 - 157
1 Feb 2012
Longo UG Loppini M Denaro L Maffulli N Denaro V

Osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures (VCFs) are an increasing public health problem. Recently, randomised controlled trials on the use of kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty in the treatment of these fractures have been published, but no definitive conclusions have been reached on the role of these interventions. The major problem encountered when trying to perform a meta-analysis of the available studies for the use of cementoplasty in patients with a VCF is that conservative management has not been standardised. Forms of conservative treatment commonly used in these patients include bed rest, analgesic medication, physiotherapy and bracing. . In this review, we report the best evidence available on the conservative care of patients with osteoporotic VCFs and associated back pain, focusing on the role of the most commonly used spinal orthoses. Although orthoses are used for the management of these patients, to date, there has been only one randomised controlled trial published evaluating their value. Until the best conservative management for patients with VCFs is defined and standardised, no conclusions can be drawn on the superiority or otherwise of cementoplasty techniques over conservative management


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 29 - 29
1 Sep 2019
van Hooff M Vriezekolk J Groot D O'Dowd J Spruit M
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Background and purpose. The Fear Avoidance Model is used to explain why some patients with acute low back pain develop chronic low back pain (CLBP). Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) targeting dysfunctional behavioural cognitions (pain catastrophizing and fear of movement) is recommended. Purpose: to investigate whether a two-week CBT-based pain management program results in improvement in dysfunctional behavioural cognitions and whether these improved cognitions improve functional outcomes. Methods and Results. Cohort study including 524 consecutive CLBP-patients. Main outcome: functioning (ODI). Secondary outcomes: pain severity (NRS), pain catastrophizing (PCS), fear of movement (TSK). Assessments: pre- and post-treatment, 1 and 12-months follow-up (FU). Improvement over time was analysed with repeated measures ANOVA. Path analyses were used to examine the influence of pain catastrophizing and fear of movement on functional disability and pain severity. Multiple imputation was used to complete missing data. Participants with incomplete data (12.8%) did not differ from those with complete data (n= 457). 59% were females, mean age 46 (± 9.5) years, mean CLBP-duration 12 (± 10.8) years. All outcomes significantly improved at post-treatment and a slight significant improvement between post-treatment and 12 months FU was observed. Path analyses showed a direct effect for catastrophizing on post-treatment functioning and an indirect effect for catastrophizing through fear of movement on post-treatment functioning. Comparable results with pain severity as outcome. Conclusion. A two-week pain management program improved dysfunctional behavioral cognitions and functional outcomes in patients with longstanding CLBP up to one year. Targeting both pain catastrophizing and fear of movement during the program resulted in improved outcomes. Conflicts of Interest: JK O'Dowd is director of and shareholder in RealHealth. The authors declare that this abstract has not been previously published in whole or substantial part nor has it been presented previously at a national or international meeting. Sources of Funding:. No funding obtained


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 34 - 34
1 Sep 2019
Schreijenberg M Koes B Lin C
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Introduction. Analgesic drugs are often prescribed to patients with low back pain (LBP). Recommendations for non-invasive pharmacological management of LBP from recent clinical practice guidelines were compared with each other and with the best available evidence on drug efficacy. Methods. Guideline recommendations concerning opioids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), paracetamol, antidepressants, anticonvulsants and muscle relaxants from national primary care guidelines published within the last 3 years were included in this review. For each pharmacotherapy, the most recent systematic review was included as the best available evidence on drug efficacy and common adverse effects were summarized. Results. Eight recent national clinical practice guidelines were included in this review (from Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, The Netherlands, UK and US). Guidelines are universally moving away from pharmacotherapy due to the limited efficacy and the risk of adverse effects. NSAIDs have replaced paracetamol as the first choice analgesics for LBP in many guidelines. Opioids are considered to be a last resort in all guidelines, but prescriptions of these medications have been increasing over recent years. Only limited evidence exists for the efficacy of antidepressants and anticonvulsants in chronic LBP. Muscle relaxants are one of the analgesics of first choice in the US, but aren't widely available and thus not widely recommended in most other countries. Conclusions. Upcoming guideline updates should shift their focus from pain to function and from pharmacotherapy to non-pharmacologic treatment options. No conflicts of interest. Sources of funding: This review has been supported by a program grant of the Dutch Arthritis Foundation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 125 - 125
1 Apr 2012
Oliver W Khan A Fender D Gibson M
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Patients with peripheral primary bone tumours are often identified and referred at an early stage to a regional tumour service according to established guidelines. In patients with primary bone tumours of the spine, however, the definitive management or outcome of such patients is being prejudiced by preliminary intervention from non-specialist services prior to their referral. Objective: To audit the standards of management of patients with primary bone tumours of the spine referred to a regional tumour service. Retrospective review of case notes and radiology. Subjects: Patients with primary bone tumour of the spine managed at the Orthopaedic Spine Unit with the Regional Bone Tumour Service in Newcastle Upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Trust. Referral to tumour service, prior intervention, operative treatment, survival, factors affecting definitive management. 31 of 39 (16 benign, 23 malignant) patients were initially referred from primary care to services other than the regional tumour service, most commonly neurosurgery (11/39) and paediatric oncology (4/39). Seven of 39 of these patients had undergone interventions prior to their referral to the tumour service, which may have negatively impacted their definitive management or curative surgery. These tumours present complex issues regarding their definitive management to optimise outcome. Closer links between departments are required to enable the multidisciplinary management of primary bone tumours of the spine. Prior surgical intervention may compromise cure. Those involved in their management should be encouraged to liaise with their regional bone tumour service to improve outcome


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 4 - 4
1 Feb 2018
Abbey H Nanke L
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Background. Chronic pain is a complex condition that demonstrates better outcomes in multidisciplinary rehabilitation, typically delivered to groups of patients by tertiary healthcare teams. An inter-disciplinary pain management course for individual patients was developed to increase the scope of physical therapists working in primary care by integrating osteopathic manual therapy with psychological interventions from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), a form of ‘3rd wave’ Cognitive Behaviour Therapy. Method and Results. A single cohort study with pre-course (n=180) and post-course (n=79) self-report measures (44% response rate) evaluated six week interventions which combined individual manual therapy with self-management, delivered by teams of qualified and student osteopaths. Data included: quality of life (European Quality of Life Questionnaire); pain, mood and coping (Bournemouth Questionnaire); psychological flexibility (Revised Acceptance and Action Questionnaire); and mindfulness (Freiburg Mindfulness Inventory). Participants were predominantly female (68%), unemployed (59%), with an average age of 49 and pain duration of more than 12 months (86%). Commonly reported symptoms were low back pain (82%), neck pain (60%) and multiple sites (86%). At six months, there were statistically significant improvements in all four outcome measures (p<0.0005), with promising effect sizes in quality of life and pain coping (r=0.52) which appeared to be mediated by changes in psychological flexibility. Conclusions. This innovative, integrated, patient-centred chronic pain management course demonstrated promising outcomes when delivered by osteopaths with varying experience. Randomised clinical trials are now needed to assess outcomes in comparison with standard care, and optimal ways of training physical therapists to deliver effective psychological interventions. Conflicts of interest: No conflicts of interest. Sources of funding: A Department of Health ‘Innovation, Excellence and Strategic Development’ (IESD) grant for the Voluntary Sector Investment Programme (AIMS Ref: 2527190; ISRCTN: 04892266). The results of this study are being submitted for publication in the International Journal of Osteopathic Medicine and will be presented at the COME Collaboration Osteopathic Conference in Barcelona on September 30th 2017 and at the Therapy Expo 2017 at the NEC in Birmingham on November 22nd 2017


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 13 - 13
1 May 2017
Graham J Heywood J
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Purpose and background. A review of secondary healthcare provision for civilians suffering persistent pain and living in the British Forces Germany (BFG) community was carried out in order to better inform referral from primary care. This population consists mostly of British nationals each with differing linguistic skills and cultural backgrounds. Patients may be referred to Evangelisches Krankenhaus Bielefeld (EvKB) in Germany or to Guys and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust (GSTT) in the UK. It was considered important to identify potential language or cultural-related barriers to improve decision making when considering where best to refer for a pain management programme (PMP). Methods. Clinical visits undertaken at GSTT and EvKB involved observation of clinical activities, collection of documentation and informal staff discussions. Data were organised into common themes and categorised to provide information for written reflective accounts on each visit. Results. The PMP at EvKB is medical doctor-led, supported by integrated psychologists. English language skills of individual staff members appear varied. Patients stay in shared rooms on a medical ward environment. Group based pain education here is provided in German only. Access to the GSTT PMP requires competent English language skills. It is psychologist-led and delivered by an interdisciplinary team. Patients reside in individual living accommodation and attend group therapy sessions. Conclusion. To reduce risk of increasing anxiety, cultural differences related to language, medical hierarchy and privacy should be considered before referring non-German speakers with complex psychosocial needs to EvKB. Given the complexity of pain, non-native speakers may misunderstand translations of cultural nuances used in pain education. No conflicts of interest. Funding was received by the primary author from SSAFA Forces Help for dissertation tuition fees. This work formed part of a project submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of MSc Clinical Management of Pain at the University of Edinburgh


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 121 - 121
1 Apr 2012
Jehan S Thambiraj S Sundaram R Boszczyk B
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Literature review about the current management strategies for U-shape sacral fractures. A thorough literature search was carried out to find out the current concepts in the management of U-shaped sacral fractures. Meta-analysis of 30 cases of U-Shaped sacral fractures. Radiological assessment for bone healing, and clinical examination for neurological recovery. 7 papers were published in the English literature between 2001 and 2009 about the management of U-shaped sacral fractures. In total 30 cases were included. The most common mechanism of injury was fall or jump from height (63%), followed by road traffic accidents and industrial injuries. Pre-operative neurological deficit was noted in 73% of patients. The average follow up time ranged from 2-12 months. 18 (60%) of patients were treated with sacroiliac screws. In this group pre-operative neurological deficit was found in 12(66%) patients. All of these patients had satisfactory radiological healing at follow up but 5(27%) patients had residual neurological deficit. No immediate complication was reported in this group. Incomplete sacroiliac screw disengagement was reported in one patient without fixation failure. Other procedures performed were lumbopelvic fixation, triangular osteosynthesis and transsacral plating. The most common cause of U-shaped sacral fractures is a fall or jump from height. There is a high association of neurological damage with U-shaped sacral fractures. From the current available evidence sacroiliac screw fixation is the most commonly performed procedure, it is however not possible to deduce which procedure is better in terms of neurological recovery


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 11 - 11
1 Feb 2018
Savergnini G Vogel S
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Purpose and background. Pain related distress is associated with poor low back pain outcomes, and is challenging for practitioners to address. This study investigated osteopaths' beliefs about the relationship between chronic pain (CP) and distress (D). The research aimed to explore how patient's distress is understood and managed by osteopath educator clinicians with an interest in the field. Methods and results. A qualitative research design using a constructivist grounded theory analytical approach was used to analyse semi-structured interviews. A purposive sample of seven osteopaths working at the British School of Osteopathy (BSO) with experience with CP-D was recruited. Data collection and analysis were carried out simultaneously. Audio-recording, verbatim-transcriptions, memos-writing and diary-keeping were used to develop themes and theory. Three main themes were identified: osteopaths understanding of the CP-D presentation, evaluation and assessment of the CP-D patient, the role of the osteopath and therapist-patient interaction in CP-D treatment. Three sub-themes were developed for each theme. Conclusions. Osteopaths recognized the relationship between CP-D. They considered the management of this presentation complex and challenging due to extensive clinical uncertainty. Osteopaths considered the therapist-patient interaction as a crucial vehicle for evaluating the individual patient presentation along with understanding patient's biopsychosocial factors and readiness to change, however a lack of rigor was identified with this process. Challenges related to evaluation were mainly related to patient characteristics and osteopath's lack of training. Further work is required to develop better evaluation and intervention strategies as well as understanding patient's attitudes to the relationship between CP and D. Conflict of interest: None. Sources of funding: None


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 37 - 37
1 Jan 2012
Heywood J Ryder I
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Background. Low back pain is a common condition amongst Armed Services personnel and can have significant impact upon their ability to undertake military duties, including being deployed into austere environments. Methods and results. This was a qualitative study of 16 military physiotherapists exploring their attitudes and beliefs towards management of low back pain. Semi-structured interviews were conducted and transcribed. The transcripts were analysed using a method of thematic content analysis. Six themes were identified; military culture, occupational issues, continuing professional development, clinical reasoning, need for a cure and labelling the patient. The highly challenging occupational demands placed on military patients appeared to prompt physiotherapists to request radiological investigations at an earlier stage than recommended in current guidelines. Justification for early investigation was considered to be both in the patients' and the Armed Services best interests, for the patient to initiate treatment with minimum delay whilst also decreasing the number of personnel unable to deploy for medical reasons. Conclusion. Obtaining investigative procedures at an early stage of the patients' management was justified by reference to the highly demanding physical duties undertaken by service personnel. The military physiotherapists' were very well informed about occupational demands placed on their patients; in this instance results from radiological investigations were used to inform not only the clinical management but more significantly the occupational management. The military physiotherapists regard for the significance of occupational factors sets them apart from those in civilian practice where management is predominantly based on clinical features alone