Injury
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Multicenter Study
The new proximal femoral nail antirotation (PFNA) in daily practice: results of a multicentre clinical study.
The treatment of unstable trochanteric femoral fractures is still challenging. The ideal implant should be easy to handle, allow for immediate full weight-bearing postoperatively and should have sufficient purchase in the femoral head/neck-fragment to limit cut-outs due to varus-deviation and rotation. The proximal femoral nail antirotation (PFNA), designed by AO, is an intramedullary device with a helical blade rather than a screw for better purchase in the femoral head and was tested in a clinical study. ⋯ Fifty-six percent of the patients regained the pre-trauma mobility and 18% died within the follow-up period. Forty-six implant-related complications--leading to 28 unplanned re-operations--were recorded, with four acetabular penetrations (three of which were after a new fall on that hip) and seven ipsilateral femoral shaft fractures as the most serious ones. As the joint-penetrations did not resemble the cut-out seen with other implants it is concluded that the PFNA--due to its helical blade--possibly limits the effects of early rotation of the head/neck-fragment in unstable trochanteric fractures and therefore seems currently to be the optimal implant for the treatment of these fractures especially in osteoporotic bone.
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Surgical trainees routinely provide evidence of their training and operative experience for assessment. National comparative data on the number of procedures performed during training was previously unavailable in the UK. Since 2003 every trainee in Trauma and Orthopaedics (T&O) in the UK and Ireland has submitted data recording their operative experience electronically via the Faculty of Health Informatics (FHI) eLogbook. ⋯ The eLogbook remains a powerful tool which can provide accurate information to support in-depth analysis of trainees, trainers, and training programmes. Based on this analysis, we suggest 'standard setting' to identify trainees performing fewer operations than required during their training. We have also established a baseline which can be used to identify the consequences of changes to length of training and working hours.
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To demonstrate that a commercially available pelvic binder the trauma pelvic orthotic device (T-POD) is an effective way to provisionally stabilise anterior-posterior compression type pelvic injuries. ⋯ Although both a circumferential sheet and the T-POD were able to decrease symphyseal diastasis consistently, only the T-POD showed a statistically significant improvement in diastasis when compared to injury measurements. In 75% of the cadaveric specimens (9 of 12), the T-POD was able to reduce the symphysis to normal (<10mm diastasis). Both a circumferential sheet and the T-POD are effective in provisionally stabilising Burgess and Young anterior-posterior compression II type pelvic injuries, but the T-POD is more effective in reducing symphyseal diastasis.
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From January 2003 and February 2006, 31 displaced acetabular fractures were treated by open reduction and internal fixation. The fractures were managed using a single approach, involving a straight lateral incision centered over the greater trochanter, trochanteric osteotomy and dislocation of the femoral head. The mean age of the patients was 48 (range 20-74 years) with a mean follow up 24 months (range from 20 to 42 months). ⋯ One patient developed peroneal nerve palsy which resolved 3 months after the surgery. The trochanteric slide osteotomy can enhance the exposure of the whole acetabulum and the femoral head. This allows better evaluation of any osteochondral lesions, intra-articular bony fragments and fracture steps, providing a more accurate reduction and easier fixation of the acetabular fracture.
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The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of the lateral fluoroscopic view in optimising percutaneous sacroiliac screw insertion. Plastic pelvic models (n=26) were used for the introduction of 104 cannulated screws into the first and second sacral (S1 and S2) vertebral bodies, controlled with an image intensifier using either two views (inlet/outlet) for the right side (group A, n=52) or three views (inlet/outlet/lateral) for the left side (group B, n=52). ⋯ After insertion into S1, in both groups there were three cases of foraminal and none of central canal perforation, but after S2 insertion in both groups there were ten foraminal and five canal perforations. A higher incidence of misplacement of S1 screws was found in group A in comparison with group B (p=0.001), with sufficient data to support percutaneous screw fixation using inlet, outlet and lateral views rather than only inlet and outlet acquisition images.