This study aimed to investigate the clinical characteristics and outcomes associated with culture-negative limb osteomyelitis patients. A total of 1,047 limb osteomyelitis patients aged 18 years or older who underwent debridement and intraoperative culture at our clinic centre from 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2020 were included. Patient characteristics, infection eradication, and complications were analyzed between culture-negative and culture-positive cohorts.Aims
Methods
Musculoskeletal infection is a devastating complication in both trauma and elective orthopaedic surgeries that can result in significant morbidity. Aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness and complications of local antibiotic impregnated dissolvable synthetic calcium sulphate beads (Stimulan Rapid Cure) in the hands of different surgeons from multiple centres in surgically managed bone and joint infections. Between January 2019 and December 2022, 106 patients with bone and joint infections were treated by five surgeons in five hospitals. Surgical debridement and calcium sulphate bead insertion was performed for local elution of antibiotics in high concentration. In all, 100 patients were available for follow-up at regular intervals. Choice of antibiotic was tailor made for each patient in consultation with microbiologist based on the organism grown on culture and the sensitivity. In majority of our cases, we used a combination of vancomycin and culture sensitive heat stable antibiotic after a thorough debridement of the site. Primary wound closure was achieved in 99 patients and a split skin graft closure was done in one patient. Mean follow-up was 20 months (12 to 30).Aims
Methods
Echocardiography is commonly used in hip fracture patients to evaluate perioperative cardiac risk. However, echocardiography that delays surgical repair may be harmful. The objective of this study was to compare surgical wait times, mortality, length of stay (LOS), and healthcare costs for similar hip fracture patients evaluated with and without preoperative echocardiograms. A population-based, matched cohort study of all hip fracture patients (aged over 45 years) in Ontario, Canada between 2009 and 2014 was conducted. The primary exposure was preoperative echocardiography (occurring between hospital admission and surgery). Mortality rates, surgical wait times, postoperative LOS, and medical costs (expressed as 2013$ CAN) up to one year postoperatively were assessed after propensity-score matching.Aims
Methods
Aims. Osteopetrosis (OP) is a rare hereditary disease that causes reduced bone resorption and increased bone density as a result of osteoclastic function defect. Our aim is to review the difficulties, mid-term follow-up results, and literature encountered during the treatment of OP. Methods. This is a retrospective and observational study containing data from nine patients with a mean age of 14.1 years (9 to 25; three female, six male) with OP who were treated in our hospital between April 2008 and October 2018 with 20 surgical procedures due to 17 different fractures. Patient data included age, sex, operating time, length of stay, genetic type of the disease, previous surgery, fractures, complications, and comorbidity. Results. The mean follow-up period was 92.5 months (25 to 140). Bony union was observed in all of our patients.
This study aimed to investigate the role of quantitative histological
analysis in the diagnosis of fracture-related infection (FRI). The clinical features, microbiology culture results, and histological
analysis in 156 surgically treated nonunions were used to stratify
the likelihood of associated infection. There were 64 confirmed
infected nonunions (one or more confirmatory criteria: pus, sinus,
and bacterial growth in two or more samples), 66 aseptic nonunions
(no confirmatory criteria), and 26 possibly infected nonunions (pathogen
identified from a single specimen and no confirmatory criteria).
The histological inflammatory response was assessed by average neutrophil
polymorph (NPs) counts per high-power field (HPF) and compared with
the established diagnosis.Aims
Patients and Methods
This study reviews the use of a titanium mesh cage (TMC) as an
adjunct to intramedullary nail or plate reconstruction of an extra-articular
segmental long bone defect. A total of 17 patients (aged 17 to 61 years) treated for a segmental
long bone defect by nail or plate fixation and an adjunctive TMC
were included. The bone defects treated were in the tibia (nine),
femur (six), radius (one), and humerus (one). The mean length of
the segmental bone defect was 8.4 cm (2.2 to 13); the mean length
of the titanium mesh cage was 8.3 cm (2.6 to 13). The clinical and
radiological records of the patients were analyzed retrospectively.Aims
Patients and Methods
Objectives. Deep bone and joint infections (DBJI) are directly intertwined with health, demographic change towards an elderly population, and wellbeing. The elderly human population is more prone to acquire infections, and the consequences such as pain, reduced quality of life, morbidity, absence from work and premature retirement due to disability place significant burdens on already strained healthcare systems and societal budgets. DBJIs are less responsive to systemic antibiotics because of poor vascular perfusion in necrotic bone, large bone defects and persistent biofilm-based infection. Emerging bacterial resistance poses a major threat and new innovative treatment modalities are urgently needed to curb its current trajectory. Materials and Methods. We present a new biphasic ceramic bone substitute consisting of hydroxyapatite and calcium sulphate for local antibiotic delivery in combination with bone regeneration. Gentamicin release was measured in four setups: 1) in vitro elution in Ringer’s solution; 2) local elution in patients treated for trochanteric hip fractures or uncemented hip revisions; 3) local elution in patients treated with a bone tumour resection; and 4) local elution in patients treated surgically for chronic corticomedullary osteomyelitis. Results. The release pattern in vitro was comparable with the obtained release in the patient studies. No recurrence was detected in the osteomyelitis group at latest follow-up (minimum 1.5 years). Conclusions. This new biphasic bone substitute containing antibiotics provides safe prevention of
Demineralised bone matrix (DBM) is rarely used for the local
delivery of prophylactic antibiotics. Our aim, in this study, was
to show that a graft with a bioactive glass and DBM combination,
which is currently available for clinical use, can be loaded with
tobramycin and release levels of antibiotic greater than the minimum
inhibitory concentration for Antibiotic was loaded into a graft and subsequently evaluated
for drug elution kinetics and the inhibition of bacterial growth.
A rat femoral condylar plug model was used to determine the effect
of the graft, loaded with antibiotic, on bone healing.Aims
Materials and Methods
The biomembrane (induced membrane) formed around polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) spacers has value in clinical applications for bone defect reconstruction. Few studies have evaluated its cellular, molecular or stem cell features. Our objective was to characterise induced membrane morphology, molecular features and osteogenic stem cell characteristics. Following Institutional Review Board approval, biomembrane specimens were obtained from 12 patient surgeries for management of segmental bony defects (mean patient age 40.7 years, standard deviation 14.4). Biomembranes from nine tibias and three femurs were processed for morphologic, molecular or stem cell analyses. Gene expression was determined using the Affymetrix GeneChip Operating Software (GCOS). Molecular analyses compared biomembrane gene expression patterns with a mineralising osteoblast culture, and gene expression in specimens with longer spacer duration (> 12 weeks) with specimens with shorter durations. Statistical analyses used the unpaired student Objectives
Methods
The management of open lower limb fractures in the United Kingdom
has evolved over the last ten years with the introduction of major
trauma networks (MTNs), the publication of standards of care and
the wide acceptance of a combined orthopaedic and plastic surgical approach
to management. The aims of this study were to report recent changes
in outcome of open tibial fractures following the implementation
of these changes. Data on all patients with an open tibial fracture presenting
to a major trauma centre between 2011 and 2012 were collected prospectively.
The treatment and outcomes of the 65 Gustilo Anderson Grade III
B tibial fractures were compared with historical data from the same
unit. Aims
Patients and Methods
Systemic antibiotics reduce infection in open
fractures. Local delivery of antibiotics can provide higher doses
to wounds without toxic systemic effects. This study investigated
the effect on infection of combining systemic with local antibiotics
via polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) beads or gel delivery. An established Combined local and systemic antibiotics were superior to systemic
antibiotics alone at reducing the quantity of bacteria recoverable
from each group (p = 0.002 for gel; p = 0.032 for beads). There
was no difference in the bacterial counts between bead and gel delivery
(p = 0.62). These results suggest that local antibiotics augment the antimicrobial
effect of systemic antibiotics. Although no significant difference
was found between vehicles, gel delivery offers technical advantages
with its biodegradable nature, ability to conform to wound shape
and to deliver increased doses. Further study is required to see
if the gel delivery system has a clinical role. Cite this article:
We compared early post-operative rates of wound
infection in HIV-positive and -negative patients presenting with open
tibial fractures managed with surgical fixation. The wounds of 84 patients (85 fractures), 28 of whom were HIV
positive and 56 were HIV negative, were assessed for signs of infection
using the ASEPIS wound score. There were 19 women and 65 men with
a mean age of 34.8 years. A total of 57 fractures (17 HIV-positive The study does not support the hypothesis that HIV significantly
increases the rate of early wound or pin-site infection in open
tibial fractures. We would therefore suggest that a patient’s HIV
status should not alter the management of open tibial fractures
in patients who have a CD4 count >
350 cells/μl. Cite this article:
We undertook a retrospective case-control study
to assess the clinical variables associated with infections in open fractures.
A total of 1492 open fractures were retrieved; these were Gustilo
and Anderson grade I in 663 (44.4%), grade II in 370 (24.8%), grade
III in 310 (20.8%) and unclassifiable in 149 (10.0%). The median
duration of prophylaxis was three days (interquartile range (IQR)
1 to 3), and the median number of surgical interventions was two
(1 to 9). We identified 54 infections (3.6%) occurring at a median
of ten days (IQR 5 to 20) after trauma. Pathogens intrinsically
resistant to the empirical antibiotic regimen used (enterococci, Infection in open fractures is related to the extent of tissue
damage but not to the duration of prophylactic antibiotic therapy.
Even for grade III fractures, a one-day course of prophylactic antibiotics
might be as effective as prolonged prophylaxis. Cite this article:
We evaluated the cost and consequences of proximal femoral fractures requiring further surgery because of complications. The data were collected prospectively in a standard manner from all patients with a proximal femoral fracture presenting to the trauma unit at the John Radcliffe Hospital over a five-year period. The total cost of treatment for each patient was calculated by separating it into its various components. The risk factors for the complications that arose, the location of their discharge and the mortality rates for these patients were compared to those of a matched control group. There were 2360 proximal femoral fractures in 2257 patients, of which 144 (6.1%) required further surgery. The mean cost of treatment in patients with complications was £18 709 (£2606.30 to £60.827.10), compared with £8610 (£918.54 to £45 601.30) for uncomplicated cases (p <
0.01), with a mean length of stay of 62.8 (44.5 to 79.3) and 32.7 (23.8 to 35.0) days, respectively. The probability of mortality after one month in these cases was significantly higher than in the control group, with a mean survival of 209 days, compared with 496 days for the controls. Patients with complications were statistically less likely to return to their own home (p <
0.01). Greater awareness and understanding are required to minimise the complications of proximal femoral fractures and consequently their cost.
We have treated 14 patients (15 fractures) with nonunion of an intra-articular fracture of the body of the calcaneum. The mean follow-up was six years (2 to 8.5). A total of 14 fractures (93%) had initially been treated operatively with 12 (86%) having non-anatomical reductions. Four feet (27%) had concomitant osteomyelitis. Of the nonunions, 14 (93%) went on to eventual union after an average of two reconstructive procedures. All underwent bone grafting of the nonunion. The eventual outcome was a subtalar arthrodesis in ten (67%) cases, a triple arthrodesis in four (27%) and a nonunion in one (6%). Three patients had a wound dehiscence; all required a local rotation flap. The mean American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society score at latest follow-up was 69, and the mean Visual analogue scale was 3. Of those who were initially employed, 82% (9 of 11) eventually returned to work. We present an algorithm for the treatment of calcaneal nonunion, and conclude that despite a relatively high rate of complication, this complex surgery has a high union rate and a good functional outcome.
Patients infected with HIV presenting with an open fracture of a long bone are difficult to manage. There is an unacceptably high rate of post-operative infection after internal fixation. There are no published data on the use of external fixation in such patients. We compared the rates of pin-track infection in HIV-positive and HIV-negative patients presenting with an open fracture. There were 47 patients with 50 external fixators, 13 of whom were HIV-positive (15 fixators). There were significantly more pin-track infections requiring pharmaceutical or surgical intervention (Checketts grade 2 or greater) in the HIV-positive group ( We recommend the use of external fixation for the treatment of open fractures in HIV-positive patients.