Arthroplasty is being increasingly used for the management of distal humeral fractures (DHFs) in elderly patients. Arthroplasty options include total elbow arthroplasty (TEA) and hemiarthroplasty (HA); both have unique complications and there is not yet a consensus on which implant is superior. This systematic review asked: in patients aged over 65 years with unreconstructable DHFs, what differences are there in outcomes, as measured by patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), range of motion (ROM), and complications, between distal humeral HA and TEA? A systematic review of the literature was performed via a search of MEDLINE and Embase. Two reviewers extracted data on PROMs, ROM, and complications. PROMs and ROM results were reported descriptively and a meta-analysis of complications was conducted. Quality of methodology was assessed using Wylde’s non-summative four-point system. The study was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42021228329).Aims
Methods
The aim of this modified Delphi process was to create a structured Revision Hip Complexity Classification (RHCC) which can be used as a tool to help direct multidisciplinary team (MDT) discussions of complex cases in local or regional revision networks. The RHCC was developed with the help of a steering group and an invitation through the British Hip Society (BHS) to members to apply, forming an expert panel of 35. We ran a mixed-method modified Delphi process (three rounds of questionnaires and one virtual meeting). Round 1 consisted of identifying the factors that govern the decision-making and complexities, with weighting given to factors considered most important by experts. Participants were asked to identify classification systems where relevant. Rounds 2 and 3 focused on grouping each factor into H1, H2, or H3, creating a hierarchy of complexity. This was followed by a virtual meeting in an attempt to achieve consensus on the factors which had not achieved consensus in preceding rounds.Aims
Methods
We identified 16 patients with a mean age of
56.5 years (31 to 86) from a large consecutive series of patients
with proximal humeral fractures over a 15-year period, who had sustained
a fracture with skin compromise after a blunt injury. The study
group represented 0.2% of 7825 proximal humeral fractures treated
during this period and all had a displaced Neer two-part fracture
pattern. Two patterns of skin injury were identified: in ten patients
there was skin penetration at the time of the original injury, and
the other six patients initially had closed injuries. These six patients
had fracture fragments penetrating the muscular envelope to lie
subcutaneously producing either early skin tethering (two patients)
or delayed skin penetration and sinus formation (four patients).
The pattern of injury to the soft-tissue envelope and the fracture
pattern were similar for all injuries. Treatment of these injuries
was determined by the initial severity of the soft-tissue injury
and the medical status of the patient. We currently favour open
reduction and
The purpose of this systematic review was to determine the rates of union for vascularized versus non-vascularized grafting techniques in the operative management of scaphoid nonunion. Secondary aims were to determine the effect of the fixation techniques used, the source of grafting, as well as the influence of fracture location (proximal pole) and avascular necrosis (AVN). A search of PubMed, MEDLINE, and Embase was performed in June 2021 using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses statement and registered using the PROSPERO International prospective register of systematic reviews. The primary outcome was union rate.Aims
Methods
Sarcopenia is characterized by a generalized progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass, strength, and physical performance. This systematic review primarily evaluated the effects of sarcopenia on postoperative functional recovery and mortality in patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery, and secondarily assessed the methods used to diagnose and define sarcopenia in the orthopaedic literature. A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Google Scholar databases according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Studies involving sarcopenic patients who underwent defined orthopaedic surgery and recorded postoperative outcomes were included. The quality of the criteria by which a diagnosis of sarcopenia was made was evaluated. The quality of the publication was assessed using Newcastle-Ottawa Scale.Aims
Methods
Ununited fractures of the scaphoid with extensive bone resorption are usually treated by bone grafting and
The increasing prevalence of osteoporosis in
an ageing population has contributed to older patients becoming
the fastest-growing group presenting with acetabular fractures.
We performed a systematic review of the literature involving a number
of databases to identify studies that included the treatment outcome
of acetabular fractures in patients aged >
55 years. An initial
search identified 61 studies; after exclusion by two independent
reviewers, 15 studies were considered to meet the inclusion criteria.
All were case series. The mean Coleman score for methodological
quality assessment was 37 (25 to 49). There were 415 fractures in
414 patients. Pooled analysis revealed a mean age of 71.8 years
(55 to 96) and a mean follow-up of 47.3 months (1 to 210). In seven
studies the results of open reduction and
A study of a collected series of femoral neck fractures in seventy-one children observed for one to nineteen years shows:. 1. This injury is rare but occurs in children of all ages from three to sixteen years old. 2. The fractures may be classified as transepiphysial, transcervical (the commonest), basal and pertrochanteric. Displacement was frequent. 3. The fracture usually followed severe violence, especially falls from a height or motor accidents. 4. Complications were frequent and included avascular necrosis, delayed union (seventeen cases), non-union (seven cases) and disturbances of growth at both the upper and lower ends of the femur. 5. Avascular necrosis occurred in thirty patients (42 per cent). Three patterns of necrosis are described : diffuse, localised and confined to the femoral neck. The radiographic appearances of avascular necrosis after this fracture are different from those of pseudocoxalgia (Legg-Calvé-Perthes' disease). 6. Non-union did not occur after adequate primary
Aims. To evaluate the outcomes of cemented total hip arthroplasty (THA)
following a fracture of the acetabulum, with evaluation of risk
factors and comparison with a patient group with no history of fracture. . Patients and Methods. Between 1992 and 2016, 49 patients (33 male) with mean age of
57 years (25 to 87) underwent cemented THA at a mean of 6.5 years
(0.1 to 25) following acetabular fracture. A total of 38 had undergone
surgical fixation and 11 had been treated non-operatively; 13 patients
died at a mean of 10.2 years after THA (0.6 to 19). Patients were
assessed pre-operatively, at one year and at final follow-up (mean
9.1 years, 0.5 to 23) using the Oxford Hip Score (OHS). Implant
survivorship was assessed. An age and gender-matched cohort of THAs
performed for non-traumatic osteoarthritis (OA) or avascular necrosis
(AVN) (n = 98) were used to compare complications and patient-reported outcome
measures (PROMs). Results. The mean time from fracture to THA was significantly shorter
for patients with AVN
(2.2 years) or protrusio (2.2 years) than those with post-traumatic
OA (9.4 years) or infection (8.0 years) (p = 0.03). Nine contained
and four uncontained defects were managed with autograft (n = 11),
bulk allograft (n = 1), or trabecular metal augment (n = 1). Initial
fracture management (open reduction and
We carried out a retrospective review of 47 intra-articular fractures of the calcaneum treated by open reduction and
1. A series of 196 fractures of the patella has been reviewed. 2. The treatment adopted was excision of the whole boneâl0l; excision of part of the boneâ33; open reduction and sutureâ18; suture with later excisionâ14; no operationâ30. 3. The average time of post-operative disability varied from 3·6 to 5·3 months. The time was appreciably less when operation was carried out before the fourteenth day than when it was done later. 4. An attempt was made to follow up, two to five years after injury, those patients in whom the result was not influenced by other major injuries of the limbs or by unexpected complications. Replies to questionnaires were received from 116 patients. 5. Of these, all regained a good range of movement, varying from 90 degrees of flexion to full movement, whether treatment was by excision of part or all the bone, or by open reduction and suture. 6. The late results of excision of the patella, as estimated by the patients themselves two to five years after treatment, showed that there was considerable residual disability. 7. After total excision of the bone only 5 per cent. of patients considered that the knee was normal; 90 per cent. complained of aching; 60 per cent. complained of "giving way." After excision of one fragment, about half the patients regarded the knee as normal and half complained of aching and stiffness. 8. The number of fractures in this series treated by accurate
Although the use of constrained cemented arthroplasty to treat distal femoral fractures in elderly patients has some practical advantages over the use of techniques of fixation, concerns as to a high rate of loosening after implantation of these prostheses has raised doubts about their use. We evaluated the results of hinged total knee replacement in the treatment of 54 fractures in 52 patients with a mean age of 82 years (55 to 98), who were socially dependent and poorly mobile. Within the first year after implantation 22 of the 54 patients had died, six had undergone a further operation and two required a revision of the prosthesis. The subsequent rate of further surgery and revision was low. A constrained knee prosthesis offers a useful alternative treatment to
We present a series of 16 patients treated between 1993 and 2006 who had a failed total ankle replacement converted to an arthrodesis using bone grafting with
Sixteen patients who underwent a revision operation for nonunion of fractures of the distal humerus following previous
We assessed the functional outcome following fracture of the tibial plateau in 63 consecutive patients. Fifty-one patients were treated by
Orthopaedic surgeries are complex, frequently performed procedures associated with significant haemorrhage and perioperative blood transfusion. Given refinements in surgical techniques and changes to transfusion practices, we aim to describe contemporary transfusion practices in orthopaedic surgery in order to inform perioperative planning and blood banking requirements. We performed a retrospective cohort study of adult patients who underwent orthopaedic surgery at four Canadian hospitals between 2014 and 2016. We studied all patients admitted to hospital for nonarthroscopic joint surgeries, amputations, and fracture surgeries. For each surgery and surgical subgroup, we characterized the proportion of patients who received red blood cell (RBC) transfusion, the mean/median number of RBC units transfused, and exposure to platelets and plasma.Aims
Methods