Total radiation exposure accumulated during circular frame treatment of distal tibial fractures was quantified in 47 patients treated by a single surgeon from March 2011 until Nov 2014. The radiation exposures for all relevant radiology procedures for the distal tibial injury were included to estimate the radiation risk to the patient. The median time of treatment in the frame was 169 days (range 105 – 368 days). Patients underwent a median of 13 sets of plain radiographs; at least one intra operative exposure and 16 patients underwent CT scanning. The median total effective dose per patient from time of injury to discharge was 0.025 mSv (interquartile range 0.013 – 0.162 and minimum to maximum 0.01–0.53). CT scanning is the only variable shown to be an independent predictor of cumulative radiation dose on multivariate analysis, with a 13 fold increase in overall exposure.Methods:
Results:
Open fractures are uncommon in the UK sporting population, however because of their morbidity then are a significant patient group. Currently there is very little in the literature describing the epidemiology of open fracture in sport. We describe the epidemiology of sport related open fractures from one centre's adult patient population. Retrospective analysis of a prospectively collected database recording all sport related open fracture s over a 15 year period in a standard population. Over the 15 year period, there were 85 fractures in 84 patients. The mean age was 29.2 years (range 15–67). 70 (83%) were male and fourteen female (17%). The six most common sports were football (n=19, 22%), rugby (n=9, 11%), cycling (n=8, 9%), hockey (n=8, 9%); horse riding (n=6, 7%) and skiing (n=6, 7%). The top five anatomical locations were fingers phalanges, 35%; tibia-fibula 23%; foreman 14%; ankle 11% and metacarpals 5%. The mean injury severity score was 7.02. Forty five patients were grade 1; 28 patients were grade 2; 8 patients were grade 3a; and 4 were grade 3b according to the Gustilo-Anderson classification system. Seven patients (8%) required plastic surgical intervention for the treatment of these fractures. The types of flaps used were split skin graft (n=4), fasciocutaneous flaps (n=2); and adipofascial flap (n=1). We looked at the epidemiology open fractures secondary to sport in one centre over a 15 year period. Football was the most common sport (22%) and within football, the most common site was the tibia and fibula. In contrast, within the cohort a whole the majority of fractures were upper limb, with the hand being the most common site. Whilst not common in sport, when they are sustained they are frequently occur on muddy sport fields or forest tracks and must be treated appropriately. A good understanding of the range and variety of injuries commonly sustained in different sports is important for clinicians and sports therapists.
Freezing cold injuries (Frostnip and Frostbite) (FCI) have become uncommon in UK military personnel relative to non-freezing cold injuries (NFCI, ‘trench foot’). However if unidentified or inappropriately treated they may lead to avoidable medical downgrading or discharge. JSP 539 recommends delay or avoidance of surgical debridement where possible. An anonymised retrospective audit was performed of FMED7 medical reports of cases seen in the Institute of Naval Medicine Cold Injury Clinic (CIC) between July 2002 and January 2014 inclusive. In all 149 FCI cases were identified, 71 affected hands only of which 34 were bilateral, and 58 affected feet only, 34 of those being bilateral. A total of 17 patients had injured both hands and feet, with 10 bilateral. Royal Marines accounted for half of these cases, with the Army making up a further third, and the Royal Navy and RAF making up the remainder. Most FCI were found to have occurred in Norway, with Marine ranks being most commonly affected. Ten cases underwent surgery: aspiration of blisters, debridement of tissue, or amputation. Seven of these procedures took place prematurely, which appeared detrimental to recovery. No patients required fasciotomy. FCI are uncommon, but in arctic conditions their risk rises dramatically. The best treatment is conservative where possible following JSP 539 guidelines and consultation with CIC should occur at the earliest possibility. The Potential benefits of surgery must be weighed against problems of injured tissue healing and expert opinion should be obtained.
The Whole Hospital Information System (WHIS) was introduced to Camp Bastion on 01 Feb 2012. It is a custom-built software solution for electronic patient records. A one-day training package is mandatory as part of current pre-deployment training The aim of this study was to identify how well the data recorded on WHIS correlates with the information recorded within the paper-based theatre logbook. A bespoke search was created by the Hospital J6 team, which identified the procedure, the surgeons involved, the date and time of the procedures and the demographic of the patient. The search was completed to include all operations performed from 01 Feb 2012 to 31 Mar 2013. This corresponds to the first 14 months of WHIS usage. The results at first looked promising, showing that 2672 surgical episodes had been performed, with an average 1.68 (0–11) procedures per episode, and 2.1 (0–9) surgeons per case. The mean operative duration was 98 minutes. However on closer scrutiny, the records showed that 447 cases (16.7%) had no procedure and 138 (5.2%) cases had no surgeon. 29 (1.1%) cases had no procedure and no surgeon recorded. The data recorded on WHIS during the study period is not currently complete enough to discontinue usage of paper records.
Surgical planning is the first step in operative fracture management. Complex situations are often faced which pose difficulties on both technical and logistic fronts. Surgical planning is the first step in operative fracture management. The degree of planning that is required is therefore determined by a number of factors including: the nature of the injury mechanism and its concomitant physiological insult, complexity of the fracture and region, expertise of the surgical team and equipment limitations. This paper explores a novel planning process in orthopaedic trauma surgery based upon British Military Doctrine. The seven questions of surgical planning represent a novel method that draws inspiration from the combat estimate process. It benefits from a global approach that encompasses logistic as well as surgical constraints. This, in turn, allows the surgical team to form an understanding of the nature of the fracture in order to develop, document and deliver a surgical plan. This has benefits for the operating surgeon, operating room practitioners and trainees alike and ultimately can result in improved patient care.
The collective orthopaedic literature appears to highlight the Jones fracture of the fifth metatarsal, as being slow to heal, and having a high incidence of non-union. There remains a lot of confusion, throughout the orthopaedic literature, about the exact nature of this fracture.
The authors present the largest case series currently published of 117 patients who sustained a Jones fracture, demonstrating patient outcomes with different modalities of care. All Medical notes from the Emergency Department are recorded on a database. A computer program was use to search the Emergency department database of the Edinburgh Royal infirmary notes data base for the terms 5th metatarsal combined with a coding for referral to fracture clinic over a 6 years period from 2004–2010. The researchers went through the X-ray archive, identified and classified all 5th metatarsal fractures. There were 117 patients in our series, refracture rate 7/117 6%. Average time to discharge 13 weeks (4–24). 18% of patients took longer than 18 weeks for their fracture to clinically heal. 34% were clinically healed at less than six weeks, with only 7% radiologically healed at six weeks. There was no significant difference in outcome between cast, moonboot, tubigrip or hard shoe in terms of outcome. A large proportion of Jones fractures have delayed healing, patients who are clinically asymptomatic may not have radiological healing. Currently in our practice there is no uniform management of Jones fractures. We discuss the difference in healing rates for different management techniques.
We reviewed all patients that suffered a deep infection following anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) repair kept between January 2007 and April 2011 at our teaching hospital NHS trust, and the two local private hospitals. 18 patients were identified. All patients underwent at least 2 arthroscopic washouts, with limited synovectomy if required. Targeted antibiotics were commenced according to the culture results, and following microbiological advice. These patients were reviewed at a minimum of 1 year following eradication of infection (range 12–46 months). There were 7 surgeons performing the ACL reconstructions. The primary outcome measure was graft failure requiring revision. Our secondary outcome measures were a history of ongoing instability, KT 1000™ measurement, Tegner and Lysholm outcome scores. There were 18 patients identified as having suffered infection after ACL infection (mean age 24.3 years, range 15–38 years). Average C Reactive Protein (CRP) was 217 on admission (range 59–397). The most common organism isolated was coagulase negative staphylococcus in 47.3% of cases. There were 3 graft failures within the infection group. Of the remaining 15 patients there were no episodes of ongoing instability and mean pivot shift grade was 1.1, mean KT 1000™ side-to- side difference was +1.8mm. There was a reported drop on the Tegner activity score of 1.75 (range 0–6) and mean Lysholm score was 89 (range 56–100). The failure rate is slightly higher than that reported in the literature. Patient reported outcome measures in the patients are broadly consistent. We recommend an aggressive approach to the treatment of deep infection following ACL reconstruction, in order to achieve a satisfactory outcome.
To describe the treatment and morbidity of lower limb (LL) football fractures in regard to returning to football in a known UK population at all skill levels. All football fractures during 2007–2008 sustained by the Lothian population were prospectively collected with the diagnosis being confirmed by the senior author when patients attended the only adult orthopaedic service in Lothian. Patients living outside the region were excluded from the study. Patients were contacted in August 2010 to ascertain their progress in return to football. There were 424 fractures in 414 patients. 366 fractures (86%) in 357 patients (86%) were followed up with a mean interval of 30 months (range 24–36 months). Of these 32% were sustained in the LL. 88% of LL injuries returned to football compared to 85% of upper limb (UL) fractures (p=0.4). 60% of LL patients were treated as outpatients. 35% were operated on −26% had ORIF and 9% IM Nailing. The most common LL fractures were Ankle 38%, Tibial Diaphysis 14%, 5th Metatarsal 11%, Fibula 9% and Great Toe 7%. Only one of the fractures was an open injury - Gustillo Class 1 2nd Phallanx Foot. Three of the 12 patients who underwent IM nailing required fasciotomy. One patient in the operative cohort developed a significant infection. The mean time for return to football for conservative treatment was 17 weeks (range 3–104 weeks), and for operative treatment 41 weeks (range 10–104 weeks). 91% of patients treated conservatively returned to football, compared to 84% of the operative cohort (p=0.3). 43% of patients had ongoing symptoms from their injury. 9% of the operative cohort required removal of metal work or further operative intervention. 83% of patients returned to the same level of football or higher following injury. Patients under 30 were 1.4 times more likely to return to sport than those over 30 (p<0.05). We have previously demonstrated that football is the most common cause of sporting fracture(1), yet little is known about patient outcome following fractures. LL fractures are less common than UL fractures, and there is no difference in the proportion of patients returning to football following LL fractures and UL fractures. Over half of LL fractures are treated as outpatients and the incidence of open fractures is very low. There is no significant difference between the operative and conservative groups in their return to football. In the over 30 age group, sustaining a fracture may act as a catalyst to quit football. This may explain the higher non-return rate compared to the under 30 age group. 43% of patients perceive that they have ongoing problems with their fracture over 24 months post-injury reflecting the considerable morbidity of football-related fractures.
In an ageing population the incidence of patients sustaining a neck of femur fracture is likely to rise. Whilst the neck of femur fracture is thought to be a pre-terminal event in many patients, there is little literature following this common fracture beyond 1 year. With improving healthcare and increasing survival rate, it is likely that a proportion of patients live to have subsequent fractures. However little is known about if these occur and what the epidemiology of these fractures are. To describe the epidemiology of fractures sustained over a ten year period in patients who had an “index” neck of femur fracture.Introduction
Aim
Osteoarthritis of basal joint of the thumb represents one of the commonest degenerative diseases of the hand and wrist region. Depending on the severity of clinical symptoms surgical treatment is often recommended. Resection arthroplasty of the CMC joint with tendon interposition can be regarded as the gold standard. The aim of our study is to compare the Burton Pellegrini technique with a new modified technique of resection arthroplasty with interposition of local capsule tissue. We retrospectively evaluated 2 groups of patients. Two Consultant Surgeons took part in the study, one for each group, with each consultant performing trapeziectomies using only one of the techiniques for all his patients. The first group underwent trapeziectomy and local capsule interposition. It consists of 26 patients with a female/male ratio of 20/6, an average age of 64 years (range 53–88), an average follow up of 3.15 years (range 9–1) and a left/right ratio of 16/10. The second group underwent a standard Burton Pellegrini including flexor tendon interposition. It consists of 13 patients with a female/male ratio of 5/8, an average age of 68 years (range 58–85), an average follow up of 4.46 years (range 9–1) and a left/right ratio of 5/8. The outcomes were compared using the Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire. A 2-tailed independent samples t-test was used for the statistical analysis of our data.Background
Materials and Methods