Our study sought to establish the necessity of prolonged pre-operative antibiotic prophylaxis in patients presenting with zone II and zone V acute flexor tendon injuries (FTI). We hypothesized that a single dose of
Despite increasing use of vena cava filters (VCFs) for pulmonary embolism (PE) prophylaxis after major trauma, there is continued debate regarding their safety and efficacy. We aimed to evaluate the impact of
Introduction.
The consequences of the complications associated with the management of slipped upper femoral epiphysis are a major source of disability in young adults. Whilst the management of chondrolysis, avascular necrosis or malunion of the femoral neck is usually undertaken by paediatric orthopaedic surgeons the initial management of SUFE in many regions is as part of an adult trauma service. This retrospective audit assessed the outcome of the management of SUFE in one such health region in which treatment occurred at three sites by a number of surgeons of varying experience, during the period July 1994 to June 2004. The aim was to compare our outcomes with those published and to identify whether our service should be altered as a consequence. The case notes and x-rays as recorded in theatre records were retrieved. Of the 64 cases that were treated during this period adequate records for 60 patients were available. Of these 60 patients there were 7 bilateral cases. Fixation in all 67 cases was by a single cannulated screw. In the 53 unilateral cases 17 underwent
Arthrosis of the hip joint can be a significant source of pain and dysfunction. While hip replacement surgery has emerged as the gold standard for the treatment of end stage coxarthrosis, there are several non-arthroplasty management options that can help patients with mild and moderate hip arthritis. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to review early
Aims. Bone is a common site of metastatic disease. Skeletal complications include disabling pain and pathological fractures. Palliative surgery for incurable metastatic bone lesions aims to preserve quality of life and function by providing pain relief and stable mobility with fixation or replacement. Current literature has few treatment studies. We present a 5 year longitudinal cohort study of surgery for metastatic bone disease at our large teaching hospital reviewing our complication and mortality rates. Methods. Patients that underwent palliative surgery for metastatic bone lesions were identified from operative records. Demographics, clinical details and outcomes were recorded. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to calculate survivorship. Results. 43 patients were treated for 44 bone metastases (34 IM Nails, 9 prosthetic replacements, 1 plate). The median age at primary diagnosis was 66 (33–92). Lung cancer was the most common primary. 56% presented with complete fractures and 44% with impending fractures (median Mirel score of 10). Pertrochanteric bone lesions were the most common (74%). Two out of 43 patients died within one day of surgery. 30 day mortality was 12% and 45% at 1 year. In those surviving the 30 day perioperative period, we report a complication rate of 14%. One patient had a dislocated prosthesis. Two patients had delayed or non union and two patients had failure of metalwork. No patient required re operation. Conclusion. Our series observed a 5% fixation failure rate and significant perioperative mortality. Whilst surgery may offer benefit in the non moribund patient with pathological fracture the decision to offer
Despite modern surgical techniques, reported rates of deep infection following Total Knee Replacement (TKR) persist between 1–2.5%. Coagulase-negative staphylococcus (CNS) has become the most common causative organism, and while growth of CNS is more indolent thanstaphylococcus aureus, it has a relatively higher minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) against cephalosporins. Tissue concentrations of
Infection is still a major problem in implant surgery. Most infections are caused by bacteria that enter the wound at the time of the operation. Although
Infection is still a major problem in implant surgery. Most infections are caused by bacteria that enter the wound at the time of the operation. Although
The management of open long bone fractures is well described and has been standardised through a number of well-established guidelines. However, there is no consensus regarding the application of local antibiotics into the open fracture site as a means of reducing infection rates. A systematic review and meta-analysis were undertaken as per PRISMA guidelines. PROSPERO Registration CRD42022323545. PubMed, EMBASE, Scopus and CENTRAL were the databases assessed. The Newcastle Ottawa Scale and the Rob 2 Tool were used to assess bias. A qualitative synthesis of all included studies and meta-analysis of suitable subgroups was undertaken.Introduction
Materials & Methods
The administration of
Introduction:. Infection as an indication for revision has increased to 12% of the total revisions (UK NJR 9. th. report). However, it is next to impossible to find out the cause for a delayed prosthetic infection. With increasing number of arthroplasty procedures, is there a need for
Open fractures carry a high risk of infection. Our objective was to evaluate the effect of a resorbable bone substitute (BS) (calcium sulphate and hydroxyapatite) eluting Gentamicin (Cerament™| G) in the prevention of bone infection and nonunion after open fracture and/or skin lesion. The data of patients undergoing osteosynthesis augmented with BS and Gentamicin between December 2012 and April 2015 were retrospectively analyzed from a prospectively established database. Patients were treated for open fractures grade 1 Gustilo or skin lesion with high risk of contamination. Surgical technique included initial debridement, open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF), implantation of BS and Gentamicin, soft tissue closure, and systemic antibiotic therapy for 2 weeks in all cases. Clinical outcome and radiographic bone defect filling were assessed by blinded observers. From 12/2013 to 4/2015 nine male and six female with mean age 53yrs (24–77) were treated with ORIF and BS and Gentamicin for open fractures. Fracture locations were tibial plateau (two), tibia (two), proximal humerus (one), calcaneus (four), talus (one), forearm (three), and elbow (one) distal femur (one). at final follow-up (mean 11.1 months; range 7–13). One patient developed a sterile seroma, which was treated conservatively. No post-operative infection occurred during the follow-up period. The calcium sulphate phase of BGS dissolved within 4–6 weeks in all cases. Bone ingrowth was assessed at 1, 2, 3, 6 and 12 months and new bone formation was observed at 6 months. One patient with an exposed comminuted fracture and large bone defect showed poor bone regeneration and was treated with a revision surgery (exchange of plate, autologous cancellous bone graft combined with BGS and Gentamicin. No complications were reported. The use of this bone substitute is well documented in the literature. The new product containing 175 mg gentamicin in 10 ml shows a high release of gentamicin in in-vitro testing, comparable to the elution profile of PMMA beads that some authors suggested to use to reduce the risk of infection. However, the use of this antibiotic carrier in order to prevent bone infection after open fracture has not been studied yet. In this case series 15 patients have been treated and good early clinical outcomes were observed in almost all cases. This material is highly osteoconductive and has a potential for the prophylaxis of infection in the treatment of open fractures. Further investigations and larger series are necessary to show the
Background. Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a common complication of pelvic and acetabular fracture fixation. There is, however, currently limited data to guide clinical decisions on thromboprophylaxis choice in these patients. Methods. This is a prospective study with retrospective analysis of all the patients who were admitted to the Northern General Hospital between August 2009 and March 2011. 2 consultants using same technique and peri-operative regime carried out all procedures. All patients were administered
An extensive review of the spinal and arthroplasty
literature was undertaken to evaluate the effectiveness of local
antibiotic irrigation during surgery. The efficacy of antibiotic
irrigation for the prevention of acute post-operative infection
after total joint arthroplasty was evaluated retrospectively in
2293 arthroplasties (1990 patients) between January 2004 and December
2013. The mean follow-up was 73 months (20 to 139). One surgeon
performed all the procedures with minimal post-operative infection. The intra-operative protocol included an irrigation solution
of normal saline with vancomycin 1000 mg/l and polymyxin 250 000
units/l at the rate of 2 l per hour. No patient required re-admission
for primary infection or further antibiotic treatment. Two morbidly obese
patients (two total hip arthroplasties) developed subcutaneous fat
necrosis requiring debridement and one was revised because the deep
capsular sutures were contaminated by the draining subcutaneous
haematoma. One patient who had undergone total knee arthroplasty
had unrecognised damage to the lateral superior geniculate artery
and developed a haematoma that became infected secondarily four
months after the surgery and underwent revision. The use of antibiotic irrigation during arthroplasty surgery
has been highly effective for the prevention of infection in the
author’s practice. However, it should be understood that any routine
prophylactic use of antibiotics may result in resistant organisms,
and the wise stewardship of the use of antibiotics is an important
part of surgical practice. Cite this article:
Introduction. Acute renal dysfunction (ARD) following orthopaedic surgery is known to increase morbidity, mortality, and length of hospital stay. The aim of this study was to compare the incidence of new acute post-operative renal dysfunction between two cohorts of elective orthopaedic surgical patients receiving either cefuroxime or a combination of gentamicin and flucloxacillin as
This is a retrospective review of the incidence of deep venous thrombosis (DVT) in 679 consecutive unilateral primary hip arthroplasty procedures performed between January 2007 and December 2010 managed with no anticoagulants. Mean age at operation was 58 years. Mean BMI was 26. The prophylaxis regimen included hypotensive epidural anesthesia, compression stockings, intermittent calf compression, early mobilization and an antiplatelet agent. 562 hybrid hip resurfacing procedures and 117 uncemented THRs, all performed through a posterior incision were included. Doppler ultrasound screening for DVT was performed in all patients between the fourth and sixth post-operative days. Patients were reviewed clinicoradiologically 6 to 10 weeks after operation and with a postal questionnaire at the end of 12 weeks to detect symptomatic VTE incidence following discharge. 14 patients with pre-existent VTE, coagulation disorders or cardiac problems requiring anticoagulant usage were excluded.Introduction
Methods
Sixty-two children with unilateral Perthes disease who underwent trochanteric epiphyseodesis combined with varus osteotomy of the femur during the active stage of the disease, (mean age at surgery: 8.4 years) and twenty controls were followed up untill skeletal maturity. The following measurements were taken on radiographs taken at skeletal maturity: the articulo-trochanteric distance (ATD), the center-trochanteric distance (CTD), the length of the abductor lever arm, the neck-shaft angle, the radius of the femoral head and the Reimer's migration index of normal and affected hips. The shape of the femoral head was assessed according to the criteria of Mose. The range of hip motion, the strength of hip abduction and limb lengths were measured and the Trendelenburg sign was elicited. The mean values of ATD and CTD were greater and the frequency of a positive Trendelenburg sign was less in children who had undergone trochanteric epiphyseodesis in 60% of operated children. The procedure was not effective in 30% and there was over-correction in in 10% of children. Logistic regression analysis showed that the size of the femoral head and the age at surgery were variables that significantly influenced the effectiveness of trochanteric growth arrest. At skeletal maturity, the mean shortening of the affected limb in operated children was 0.44 cm (SD 0.68 cm), while that of non-operated children was 0.86 cm (SD 0.78 cm) (p: 0.023). The range of motion of the hip was excellent and there were no significant differences in the range of motion between children with optimal correction, under-correction and over-correction. A probability curve plotted on the basis of the of a logistic regression model suggests that effective trochanteric arrest may be achieved in a high proportion of children operated at, or before, 8.5 years of age, and in half the children operated between the age of 8.5 years and 10 years.
Open fractures with bone loss and skin lesions carry a high risk of infection and complication. Treatment options are usually a two-stage approach (debridement, temporary stabilization with external fixation followed by open reduction and stabilization with plate). We describe an experience for a single stage procedure with an antibiotic eluting bone graft substitute (BGS) for prophylaxis of implant-related infection. Between December 2014 and January 2016 were analysed the data of twenty-six patients with open fractures (Gustilo and Anderson grade I and II) or with skin lesion and high risk of contamination and bone loss. They where treated with debridement of soft tissue, closed reduction of fracture, placement of a plate augmented with BGS eluting antibiotic (gentamicin (1) and/or Vancomicin (2)). Ampicillin and sulbactam 3g three times daily was used as systemic antibiotic prophylaxis minimum for one week. Clinical outcome and radiographic bone defect filling were assessed by blinded observers.Aim
Method
To assess the risk of hip dislocations in children with cerebral palsy (CP) attending special schools, and the effects of preventative soft tissue surgery (psoas and adductor tenotomy). 110 children were reviewed from 1985-2000. Severity of CP was graded according to the Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS). Hemiplegics - grade 1, Diplegics grades 2 & 3, Quadriplegics grades 4 & 5. Patients were grouped into age groups 5, 10 and 15 years and the number of hip dislocations in each group were noted. Numbers of patients who had preventative soft tissue surgery was also noted. Indication for surgery, >35% femoral head uncovering.Aim
Method