Patients who sustain neck of femur fractures are at high risk of malnutrition. Our intention was to assess to what extent malnutrition was associated with worse patient outcomes. A total of 1,199 patients with femoral neck fractures presented to a large UK teaching hospital over a three-year period. All patients had nutritional assessments performed using the Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool (MUST). Malnutrition risk was compared to mortality, length of hospital stay, and discharge destination using logistic regression. Adjustments were made for covariates to identify whether malnutrition risk independently affected these outcomes.Aims
Methods
Corticosteroid use has been implicated in the
development of osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH). The exact mechanism
and predisposing factors such as age, gender, dosage, type and combination
of steroid treatment remain controversial. Between March and July
2003, a total of 539 patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
were treated with five different types of steroid. There were 129
men (24%) and 410 women (76%) with a mean age of 33.7 years (21
to 59). Routine screening was undertaken with radiographs, MRI and/or
CT to determine the incidence of ONFH. Of the 129 male patients with SARS, 51 (39.5%) were diagnosed
as suffering from ONFH, compared with only 79 of 410 female patients
(19.3%). The incidence of ONFH in the patients aged between 20 and
49 years was much higher than that of the group aged between 50
and 59 years (25.9% (127 of 491) Cite this article:
The scarcity of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in iliac crest bone marrow aspirate (ICBMA), and the expense and time in culturing cells, has led to the search for alternative harvest sites. The reamer-irrigation-aspirator (RIA) provides continuous irrigation and suction during reaming of long bones. The aspirated contents pass via a filter, trapping bony fragments, before moving into a ‘waste’ bag from which MSCs have been previously isolated. We examined the liquid and solid phases, performed a novel digestion of the solid phase, and made a comparative assessment in terms of number, phenotype and differentiation capacity with matched ICBMA. The solid fraction from the filtrate was digested for 60 minutes at 37°C with collagenase. Enumeration was performed via the colony-forming unit fibroblast (CFU-F) assay. Passage (P2) cells were differentiated towards osteogenic, adipogenic and chondrogenic lineages, and their phenotypes assessed using flow cytometry (CD33, CD34, CD45, CD73, CD90, and CD105). MSCs from the RIA phases were able to differentiate at least as well as those from ICBMA, and all fractions had phenotypes consistent with other established sources. The median number of colonies for the three groups was: ICBMA = 8.5 (2 to 86), RIA-liquid = 19.5 (4 to 90), RIA-solid = 109 (67 to 200) per 200 μl. The mean total yield of cells for the three groups was: ICBMA = 920 (0 to 4275), RIA-liquid = 114 983 (16 500 to 477 750), RIA-solid = 12 785 (7210 to 28 475). The RIA filtrate contains large numbers of MSCs that could potentially be extracted without enzymatic digestion and used for bone repair without prior cell expansion.