The current treatment concepts of acute and chronic osteomyelitis are associated with unsolved challenges and problems, underlining the need for ongoing medical research. The invention and prevalence of an absorbable, gentamicin-loaded ceramic bone graft, that is well injectable for orthopedic trauma and bone infections, enlarges the treatment scope regarding the rise of posttraumatic deep bony infections. This substance can be used either for infection, dead-space, or reconstruction management. The bone cement, eluting antibiotics continuously to the surrounding tissue, outperforms the intravenous antibiotic therapy and enhances the local concentration levels efficiently. This study aims to evaluate the power and practicability of bone cement in several locations of bony infections. The occurrence of posttraumatic infections with acute or chronic osteomyelitis increases in trauma surgery along with progression of high impact injuries and consecutively high incidence of e.g. open fractures. We present a case-series of 33 patients (18w/15m; 56,8±19,4 years) with posttraumatic osteomyelitis at different anatomic sites, who were treated in our level I trauma center. All of these patients received antibiotic eluting bone cement (Cerement® G) for infection and reconstruction management.Aim
Method
The current treatment concepts of acute and chronic osteitis are associated with unsolved challenges and problems, underlining the need for ongoing medical research. The invention and prevalence of an absorbable, gentamicin-loaded ceramic bone graft, that is well injectable for orthopedic trauma and bone infections, enlarges the treatment scope regarding the rise of posttraumatic deep bone infections. This substance can be used either for infection, dead-space, or reconstruction management. The bone cement, eluting antibiotics continuously to the surrounding tissue, outperforms the intravenous antibiotic therapy and enhances the local concentration levels efficiently. This study aims to evaluate the power and practicability of bone cement in several locations of bone infections. The occurrence of posttraumatic infections with acute or chronic osteitis increases in trauma surgery along with progression of high impact injuries and consecutively high incidence of e.g. open fractures. We present a case-series of 10 patients with posttraumatic osteitis at different anatomic sites, who were treated in our level I trauma center. All of these patients received antibiotic eluting bone cement* for infection and reconstruction management.Aim
Method
In 100 patients the fulcrum axis which is the line connecting the anterior tip of the coracoid and the posterolateral angle of the acromion, was used to position true anteroposterior radiographs of the shoulder. This method was then compared with the conventional radiological technique in a further 100 patients. Three orthopaedic surgeons counted the number of images without overlap between the humeral head and glenoid and calculated the amount of the glenoid surface visible in each radiograph. The analysis was repeated for intraobserver reliability. The learning curves of both techniques were studied. The amount of free visible glenoid space was significantly higher using the fulcrum-axis method (64 vs 31) and the comparable glenoid size increased significantly (8.56 vs 6.47). Thus the accuracy of the anteroposterior radiographs of the shoulder is impaired by using this technique. The intra and interobserver reliability showed a high consistency. No learning curve was observed for either technique.