The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Jul 1997
Comparative StudyPulmonary effects of fixation of a fracture with a plate compared with intramedullary nailing. A canine model of fat embolism and fracture fixation.
Fat-embolism syndrome and pulmonary dysfunction may develop in multiply injured patients who have a fracture of a long bone. Although early fixation of a fracture is beneficial, intramedullary nailing may exacerbate pulmonary dysfunction by causing additional embolization of marrow fat. We examined the pulmonary effects of the timing and method of fixation of a fracture in a canine fat-embolism model. Fat embolism was induced in forty-one adult dogs by reaming the ipsilateral femur and tibia followed by pressurization of the intramedullary canal. The animals were divided into a control group of eight dogs that had induction of fat embolism alone and an experimental group of thirty-three dogs that had induction of fat embolism and internal fixation of a transverse fracture of the middle of the contralateral femoral shaft. In the control group, four dogs each were killed four hours and twenty-four hours after induction of fat embolism. In the experimental group, a femoral fracture was created and fixation was performed four hours after embolic showering in fifteen animals and twenty-four hours after embolization in eighteen animals. The two experimental groups were subdivided according to the method of fixation of the fracture: eleven dogs each had application of a plate, nailing without reaming, and nailing with reaming. The pulmonary arterial pressure and the alveolar-arterial gradient were measured preoperatively, during induction of fat embolism, and as long as one hour after fixation of the fracture but before the animal was killed. The lungs, brain, and kidneys were examined for pathological and physiological evidence of intravascular fat. The intravascular fat persisted for twenty-four hours after induction of pulmonary fat embolism. Pulmonary arterial pressure remained elevated at four hours after the embolic showering, before creation and fixation of the fracture. By twenty-four hours after the induction of fat embolism, pulmonary arterial pressure had returned to the baseline level. Neither the creation nor the fixation of the fracture affected pulmonary arterial pressure. In the animals that had fixation of a fracture four hours after embolization, both nailing with reaming and nailing without reaming produced alveolar-arterial gradients that were higher than the baseline values, whereas fixation with a plate did not change the alveolar-arterial gradient significantly from the baseline value. In addition, the alveolar-arterial gradients in the animals that had nailing with reaming and nailing without reaming four hours after embolization were, respectively, four and 3.5 times higher than that in the animals that had fixation of the femur with a plate. In the animals that had fixation twenty-four hours after embolization, none of the methods for fixation affected the alveolar-arterial gradient. The amount of embolic fat in the lungs, brain, and kidneys was not affected by fixation of the fracture when it was performed at either the four-hour or the twenty-four-hour time-interval. Scores for pulmonary edema were increased by fixation of the fracture, but there was no difference among the scores associated with the three methods of fixation. ⋯ The findings of the present study indicated that the amount of intravascular fat persisting in the lungs, kidneys, and brain twenty-four hours after pressurization of the intramedullary canal is not affected by the method of fixation of the fracture. Fixation of a fracture is associated with minimum evidence of acute inflammation and has no effect on pulmonary artery pressure. The development of pulmonary dysfunction from fat emboli depends on other factors, not just on the presence of fat in pulmonary vessels. It appears that the method of fracture fixation has little influence on the outcome of treatment.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Jun 1997
Comparative StudyAdult respiratory distress syndrome, pneumonia, and mortality following thoracic injury and a femoral fracture treated either with intramedullary nailing with reaming or with a plate. A comparative study.
Multiply injured patients (an Injury Severity Score of 17 points or more) who were admitted to one of two level-I regional trauma centers between 1983 and 1994 because of a fracture of the femoral shaft with a thoracic injury (an Abbreviated Injury Scale score of 2 points or more) or without a thoracic injury were studied retrospectively. The patient populations and the protocols for the treatment of trauma were similar at the two centers; however, the centers differed with regard to the technique that was used for acute stabilization of the fracture of the femoral shaft. At Center I intramedullary nailing with reaming was used in 217 (95 per cent) of the 229 patients, whereas at Center II a plate was used in 206 (92 per cent) of the 224 patients. ⋯ The occurrence of adult respiratory distress syndrome in the patients who had a femoral fracture without a thoracic injury did not differ substantially according to whether the fracture had been treated with a nail (118 patients) or a plate (114 patients). Likewise, the frequency of adult respiratory distress syndrome, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, failure of multiple organs, or death for the patients who had a femoral fracture and a thoracic injury was similar regardless of whether nailing with reaming (117 patients) or a plate (104 patients) had been used. The use of intramedullary nailing with reaming for acute stabilization of fractures of the femur in multiply injured patients who have a thoracic injury without a major comorbid disease does not appear to increase the occurrence of adult respiratory distress syndrome, pulmonary embolism, failure of multiple organs, pneumonia, or death.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Jun 1997
Comparative StudyBankart repair for anterior instability of the shoulder. Long-term outcome.
Anterior instability of the shoulder is a commonly encountered entity in orthopaedic practice. The Bankart procedure is considered by many surgeons to be the treatment of choice for this condition. Despite its widespread popularity, there have been no studies on the long-term outcome of the Bankart procedure as far as we know. ⋯ Fifty-four patients said that they would have a Bankart procedure performed again for the same problem. We present a new system for rating the shoulder that emphasizes function and is based specifically on the goals stated by the patients to be most important with regard to the shoulder. Using this system, we found that the Bankart procedure offers an excellent objective long-term outcome with a high degree of patient satisfaction.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Jun 1997
Repair of the defect in spondylolysis. Durable fixation with pedicle screws and laminar hooks.
Direct repair of a defect in the pars interarticularis was performed with use of bone-grafting and internal fixation with a pedicle screw, rod, and laminar hook in order to achieve a higher prevalence of osseous union than that achieved with commonly used procedures. The configuration of the head of the screw, which is designed to allow it to connect with the rod at the necessary angle, simplified the placement of the rod. The procedure was performed in sixteen patients who had a bilateral defect of the pars interarticularis with or without grade-I or II spondylolisthesis, had had failure of non-operative treatment, and had had temporary relief of pain after the area of the defect in the pars interarticularis had been infiltrated with lidocaine. ⋯ None had a complication, such as infection, breakage of the implant, or irritation of a nerve root. The method used for direct repair of the defect of the pars interarticularis in these patients proved to be simple and effective. Relief of symptoms appeared to depend on decompression of the affected nerve root, if one was involved, and on preoperative prediction of the locus of the symptoms by infiltration of the pars interarticularis with lidocaine.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · May 1997
Meta Analysis Comparative StudyA meta-analysis of the efficacy of non-operative treatments for idiopathic scoliosis.
With use of data culled from twenty studies, members of the Prevalence and Natural History Committee of the Scoliosis Research Society conducted a meta-analysis of 1910 patients who had been managed with bracing (1459 patients), lateral electrical surface stimulation (322 patients), or observation (129 patients) because of idiopathic scoliosis. Three variables - the type of treatment, the level of maturity, and the criterion for failure - were analyzed to determine which had the greatest impact on the outcome. We also examined the effect of the type of brace that was used and the duration of bracing on the success of treatment. ⋯ The weighted mean proportion of success for the six types of braces included in this review was 0.92, with the highest proportion (0.99) achieved with the Milwaukee brace. We found that use of the Milwaukee brace or another thoracolumbosacral orthosis for twenty-three hours per day effectively halted progression of the curve. Bracing for eight or sixteen hours per day was found to be significantly less effective than bracing for twenty-three hours per day (p < 0.0001).