Nerve transfer has become a common and often effective reconstructive strategy for proximal and complex peripheral nerve injuries of the upper limb. This case-based discussion explores the principles and potential benefits of nerve transfer surgery and offers in-depth discussion of several established and valuable techniques including: motor transfer for elbow flexion after musculocutaneous nerve injury, deltoid reanimation for axillary nerve palsy, intrinsic re-innervation following proximal ulnar nerve repair, and critical sensory recovery despite non-reconstructable median nerve lesions.Abstract
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is a major orthopaedic
intervention. The length of a patient's stay has been progressively
reduced with the introduction of enhanced recovery protocols: day-case
surgery has become the ultimate challenge. This narrative review shows the potential limitations of day-case
TKA. These constraints may be social, linked to patient’s comorbidities,
or due to surgery-related adverse events (e.g. pain, post-operative
nausea and vomiting, etc.). Using patient stratification, tailored surgical techniques and
multimodal opioid-sparing analgesia, day-case TKA might be achievable
in a limited group of patients. The younger, male patient without
comorbidities and with an excellent social network around him might
be a candidate. Demographic changes, effective recovery programmes and less invasive
surgical techniques such as unicondylar knee arthroplasty, may increase
the size of the group of potential day-case patients. The cost reduction achieved by day-case TKA needs to be balanced
against any increase in morbidity and mortality and the cost of
advanced follow-up at a distance with new technology. These factors
need to be evaluated before adopting this ultimate ‘fast-track’
approach. Cite this article:
The World Health Organization (WHO) launched
the first Global Patient Safety Challenge in 2005 and introduced
the ‘5 moments of hand hygiene’ in 2009 in an attempt to reduce
the burden of health care associated infections. Many NHS trusts
in England adopted this model of hand hygiene, which prompts health
care workers to clean their hands at five distinct stages of caring
for the patient. Our review analyses the scientific foundation for
the five moments of hand hygiene and explores the evidence, as referenced
by WHO, to support these recommendations. We found no strong scientific
support for this regime of hand hygiene as a means of reducing health
care associated infections. Consensus-based guidelines based on
weak scientific foundations should be assessed carefully to prevent
shifting the clinical focus from more important issues and to direct
limited resources more effectively. We recommend caution in the universal adoption of the WHO ‘5
moments of hand hygiene’ by orthopaedic surgeons and other health
care workers and emphasise the need for evidence-based principles
when adopting hospital guidelines aimed at promoting excellence
in clinical practice.