Injury
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Presentation of benign lesions with a pathological fracture may be confusing to general orthopedic surgeons regarding missing a fracture in a pathological bone, the need for special care for these lesions, and the potential for healing of these fractures. The objective of this work was to evaluate the clinical and radiological outcomes of the treatment of patients with stages 1 and 2 Enneking benign bone-tumors presented with pathological fractures. ⋯ Level III, retrospective.
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Pelvic ring injuries presenting in hemorrhagic shock have historically had a mortality rate greater than 30%. To address this high mortality rate our institution has had a multi-disciplinary protocol for hemodynamically unstable pelvic ring injuries since 1993. In 2004, this protocol was revised to prioritize pre-peritoneal pelvic packing over angiography to rapidly control hemorrhage, reduce high-volume blood transfusions, and decrease the number of deaths from acute blood loss. ⋯ Despite the benefits of such a protocol, many trauma centers are not routinely stabilizing pelvic ring injuries or controlling pelvic hemorrhage. Subsequently, mortality rates remain high with a significant proportion of patients dying from acute blood loss. Trauma centers adhering to multi-disciplinary protocols that allow for rapid stabilization of the pelvis and simultaneous control of multiple sites of hemorrhage in hybrid operative suites are promising future directions for the management of patients with these lethal injuries.
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In isolated high energy pelvic ring injuries, early surgical and nonsurgical fixation belongs to the rescue tools required for rapid recovery. With the increasing use of pelvic binders on scene, these patients frequently arrive in a better condition at the level I trauma centre than without any measures of immobilisation. We describe our surgical tools to achieve rapid fixation within the first hours after arrival, taking into account if additional injuries or special stations are relevant.
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Observational Study
Making trauma registries more useful for improving patient care: A survey of trauma care and trauma registry stakeholders across Australia and New Zealand.
Injury is a major global health burden. Trauma registries have been used for decades to monitor the burden of injury and inform trauma care. However, the extent to which trauma registries have fulfilled their potential remains uncertain. The aims of this study were to determine the current and priority uses of trauma registries across Australia and New Zealand and to establish the priority clinical outcomes, the probability for which, if known for an individual trauma patient, would better inform that same patient's care, during hospital admission. ⋯ There is a mismatch between current trauma registry uses and future priorities. The priority outcomes demanding prediction in the first 24 h of a trauma patient's stay are preventable death, missed injury, quality of life, hospital costs, thromboembolism, post-traumatic stress disorder, length of hospital stay and errors in clinical decision-making.
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Posterior wall fractures are the most frequent and account for up to 25% of all acetabular fractures, open reduction and internal fixation by a Kocher Langenbeck approach is the gold standard for this injury but even with anatomic reduction poor outcomes are higher than expected, The present study proposes a technique for open reduction and internal minimizing soft tissue and periosteal injury through a modified Kocher-Langenbeck and spring plate fixation. ⋯ IV.