Forefoot surgery is often performed under regional anaesthesia (ankle block) in awake patients, using tourniquet or esmarch bandage to obtain bloodless field. The purpose of this study was to examine the value and need for local tourniquet pain control using local subcutaneous analgesic mixture in patients undergoing forefoot surgery under regional anaesthesia. We prospectively randomized 56 patients who underwent forefoot surgery under ankle block to receive subcutaneous local anaesthetic mixture under the tourniquet. We checked for local tourniquet pain score (VAS 0–100) and skin condition during and after the procedure. Tourniquet was quite tolerable in both groups, with an average VAS score of 7–21. No difference was observed between groups throughout most of the procedure. No correlation between VAS scores and procedure length or patient's age or gender.Background
Results
Effective pre-surgical preparation is an important step in limiting surgical wound contamination and prevention of surgical site infection. The purpose of this study is to evaluate bacterial skin contamination after surgical skin preparation in foot surgery prior to surgery and at the end of surgery, in order to determine if current techniques are satisfactory in eliminating harmful pathogens, and to compare the results of the cultures obtained pre and post operatively with infection rate. Twenty consecutive patients scheduled for Hallux Valgus procedures were studied. Each lower extremity was prepared in the regular method with a two-step technique, Septal scrub followed by a Alcohol Chlorhexidine antiseptic solution. After preparation and draping, cultures were obtained at three locations: the hallux nailfold, first, second, third and fourth web spaces, and the anterior ankle (control). Prior to surgery, positive cultures were obtained from 80% of hallux nailfolds and 5% of web spaces. At the end of surgery, positive cultures were obtained from 80% of hallux nailfolds and 25% of web spaces. None of the controls had positive culture. 5% of all cases developed post operative infection. Based on the findings of the current study, pre-surgical skin preparation with a two-step Septal scrub followed by a Alcohol Chlorhexidine antiseptic solution is not sufficient in eliminating pathogens in foot and ankle surgery. No statistical correlation was found between the results of the cultures obtained preoperatively or post operatively with post operative infection rate. The unique environment of the foot and its resident organisms probably plays a role in the higher infection rates associated with surgery of the foot. Better methods of preparing the surgical site should be searched for.
The need for better durability and longevity in total hip arthroplasty in high demand patients is a constant challenge. For this purpose a metal-on-metal prosthesis with improved tribology was developed. Our early results of using this system are presented.
4 patients had bilateral THR. There were 3 revision cases due to loosening of cemented cup and 3 post surgical hip procedures. The etiology of the hip pathology was OA in 23, AVN in 10, CDH in 3, two post surgical procedures and one Paget’s disease. The THR prosthesis system consisted of a Wagner type uncemented cup with a factory-assembled Metasul inlay. An uncemented collarless hydroxypaptite coated, Spotorno stem, with a modular 28mm head was used. Long stem was used in 3 cases and reinforcement cage in one. Additional screws (average of 3,4) were used for primary cup fixation. The anterolateral approach, laying either supine or on the side was performed. Average hospitalization time was 12 days. Full weight bearing was allowed as tolerated. Results: The average follow-up was 30 months. Average Harris Hip Score pre-operatively was 45 (15-74) and post-operatively 75 (15–99). Subjectively, 87% of the primary cases with various etiologies were satisfied with the outcome. The majority of patients had pain-free range of motion and returned to improved daily function. One technical intra-operative complication (false route) was resolved with immediate revision. Two patients required cerclage wiring due to a femoral crack. Immediate post-operative complications included 2 cases of persistent distal peroneal nerve palsy. Three cases of anterior dislocations were reduced and did not recur. A case of positive intra-operative culture was treated successfully with 6 weeks of intravenous antibiotic therapy. Late complications included one case of cup loosening and one of a painful hip with suspected infection that required revision with a cemented prosthesis. Radiographic examination included measuring of radiolucent lines around the femoral stem according to the zones described by Gruen et al. and acetabulum as described by DeLee and Charnley. No femoral radiolucent lines were found. Seven cases revealed partial ace-tabular radiolucent lines.