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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXIX | Pages 192 - 192
1 Sep 2012
Jones M Johnston A Swain D Kealey D
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The royal victoria hospital is a tertiary trauma centre receiving pelvic injury referrals for a population of 1.7 million. The use of ilio-sacral screw fixation with low anterior frame stabilisation has been adopted as the principle treatment for unstable pelvic ring injuries in our institution. We aim to describe our practice and outcomes following the use of percutaneous screw fixation of the pelvis.

The review included standardised assessment of health-related quality of life (SF-36) as well as the Iowa pelvic score and Majeed pelvic injury outcome scores. Data was also collected on associated injuries, post-operative complications, nerve injury and pain scores.

A total case series of 45 patients undergoing percutaneous ilio-sacral screw fixation following traumatic pelvic injury were identified over a 5 year period. Of these 23 were contactable to follow-up or responded to questionnaire review.

The mean follow up was 680 days (range 151–1962). The mean age was 33 (range 18–57).

The mean SF-36 physical and mental scores were 38 and 46 respectively. The mean Majeed score was 69 and Iowa pelvic score was 65. The mean pain score was 3.5 (range 0–7). There were no incidences of deep infection, post-operative PE or nerve injury related to screw insertion.

Patients with isolated pelvic injuries performed better on outcome scoring however the low SF-36 scores highlight the severity of pelvic injuries


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXIX | Pages 244 - 244
1 Sep 2012
Jones M Mahmud T Narvani A Hamid I Lewis J Williams A
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Data was collected on 139 eligible patients a minimum of 18 months post surgery who had had 2 or more ligaments reconstructed. 63 patients were available for clinical follow up. It is the largest single surgeon series studied.

27% of injuries were high energy traffic accidents. 73% were low energy, mainly sports related. 63% of patients were delayed referrals to our unit. Of these nearly 48% had already undergone knee surgery, often more than 6 months post injury. 17% of all cases presented with failed ligament reconstructions. Of those patients followed up 19% were operated upon within 3 weeks of injury, 56% were delayed reconstructions with a mean time to surgery of 21 months and 25% were revision reconstructions. Time to follow up ranged from 18 months to 10 years.

The median KOS ADL, KOS Sports Activity and Lysholm scores for uni-cruciate surgery were all better than those for bi-cruciate surgery. All results were better for acute rather than chronic cases, which in turn were better than those for revision cases. The Tegner score showed that only acute uni-cruciate reconstructions returned to their pre-injury level.

TELOS stress radiographs demonstrated a mean post drawer of 5.9 mm side-to-side difference after reconstructions involving the PCL. IKDC grades showed 6% of knees were normal and 57% were nearly normal.

37% required further surgery, mainly to increase movement or for hardware removal. There was 1 deep infection and 2 cases of thrombosis. There were no vascular complications but 2 had transient nerve injuries.

Multi-ligament surgery can produce good functional outcomes but the knee is never normal. There is an increased risk of PCL laxity post op. Early referral to a specialist unit is suggested as delayed referral to a specialist unit potentially subjects the patient to unnecessary surgery and may affect outcome.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVIII | Pages 169 - 169
1 Sep 2012
Gerson JN Kodali P Fening SD Miniaci A Jones M
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Purpose

The presence of a Hill-Sachs lesion is a major contributor to failure of surgical intervention following anterior shoulder dislocation. The relationship between lesion size, measured on pre-operative MRI, and risk of recurrent instability after surgery has not previously been defined.

Hypothesis: We hypothesized that the size of Hill-Sachs lesions on pre-op MRI would be greater among patients who failed soft tissue stabilization when compared to patients who did not fail. We also hypothesized that the existence of a glenoid lesion would lead to failure with smaller Hill-Sachs lesions.

Method

Nested case-control analysis of 114 patients was performed to evaluate incidence of failure after soft tissue stabilization. Successful follow-up of at least 24 months was made with 91 patients (80%). Patients with recurrent instability after surgery were compared to randomly selected age and sex matched controls in a 1:1 ratio. Pre-operative sagittal and axial MRI series were analyzed for presence of Hill-Sachs lesions, and maximum edge-to-edge length and depth as well as location of the lesion related to the bicipital groove (axial) and humeral shaft (sagittal) were measured.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXIX | Pages 193 - 193
1 Sep 2012
Patel M Jiggins M Jones M Williams S
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Introduction

Despite the lack of robust evidence, numerous different track and trigger warning systems have been implemented. The MEWS (Modified Early Warning Score system) is one such example, and has not been validated in an emergency traumasetting. A considerable proportion of trauma admissions are elderly patients with co-morbidities. Early recognition of physiological deterioration and prompt action could therefore be lifesaving.

Aim

Identify whether the implementation of a MEWS system coupled with an outreach service had resulted in a reduction in the mortality within our unit.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVII | Pages 20 - 20
1 May 2012
Hak P Jones M
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Background

Many Accident and Emergency units employ a “one size fits all” policy with regard to referring patients with musculoskeletal injury for further review in fracture clinic. This may result in inappropriate timings of review in the clinic wasting patient time, clinic time and hospital resources.

Aim

Our firm employs a rapid review of all radiographs and A&E notes of all musculoskeletal injury patients referred to our fracture clinic on a weekly basis. We aimed to investigate the impact this review has on the running of our clinic and what benefits were gained.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXIII | Pages 149 - 149
1 May 2012
Mcdougall C Watts M Myers P Risebury M Jones M
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Many of the questionnaire based scoring systems (i.e. Rowe score) require some form of clinical assessment. These clinical components can be very difficult to perform on a large scale particularly when a patient lives a long distance from clinic. We have attempted to counter this problem by asking the patient to asses their own range of motion. The aim of this study was to test the agreement between patient and clinician measured shoulder external rotation range using a photo based self-assessment tool.

Fifty-one professional and semi-professional rugby players were recruited to assess shoulder external rotation range. Each player was presented with a photo based shoulder external rotation range self-assessment tool, which featured four photos of progressive shoulder external rotation in 2 positions, 900 abduction (150, 300, 450 & 600 of external rotation) and 00 abduction (700, 800, 900 & 1000 of external rotation). The players were asked to perform active external rotation in these two positions and mark the image which best matched their maximal external rotation. The player was then independently assessed using the same tool, by a clinician.

The difference between the player's and the clinician's assessment was analysed using a weighted Kappa test. The Kappa for the shoulder external rotation in 900 abduction was 0.75 and 0.71 for left and right respectively, and 0.57 and 0.55 for shoulder external rotation in 00 abduction. Thus, the strength of agreement between the player's and clinician's assessment of shoulder external rotation is good in 900 abduction and moderate in 00 abduction.

These results demonstrate that the photo-based shoulder external rotation range self-assessment tool is a very useful addition to researchers' and clinicians' toolkits and may be most useful when a patient lives a great distance from/or is unable to attend a clinic.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 140 - 140
1 Mar 2012
Dhukaram V Brewer J Tafazal S Lee P Dias J Jones M Gaur A
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Introduction

Brachial plexus blocks are used widely to provide intra-operative and post-operative analgesia. Their efficacy is well established, but little is known about discharging patients with a numb or weak arm. We need to quantify the risk of complications for improved informed consent.

Objectives

To assess whether patients can be safely discharged from hospital before the brachial plexus block has worn off and record any complications and concerns.