Injury
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This study compares the relative strengths of iliosacral lag screws and transiliac bars in the fixation of vertically unstable pelvic injuries with sacral fractures. A vertical sacral fracture was artificially induced by vertical loading in eight pelvises from cadavers, which were then fixed with two 6.5 mm iliosacral lag screws or two 6.4 mm transiliac bars. ⋯ The mean strength of iliosacral lag screw fixation was 819 newtons and for transiliac bars it was 1066 newtons, but the study was too small for the difference to be judged as statistically significant. Various advantages and disadvantages of each method of fixation are discussed.
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Between January 1980 and December 1989, 133 consecutive patients were treated for a fracture of the shaft of one or both forearm bones (134 forearms in total). All fractures were stabilized with AO/ASIF 3.5 mm stainless-steel dynamic compression plates. The 1 year follow-up rate was 99 per cent; the long-term follow-up rate was 92 per cent (the mean long-term follow-up was 10.2 years (range, 2.7-15.2)) so there were 96 men and 35 women, with an average age of 37.5 years (range, 16-63). ⋯ In this group, there were three refractures (4.3 per cent) occurring at a mean of 8.7 months (range, 0-14) after plate removal. This study confirms the safety and efficacy of plate osteosynthesis in forearm shaft fractures: a high union rate and low complication rate can be anticipated. The data presented form the most reliable information on this subject currently available with the longest and highest rate of follow up of a sufficient number of patients using a single implant system in a single institution.
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A total of 59 (13.5 per cent) of 437 patients with cervical hip fractures died within the first 3 months, compared with an expected mortality rate of 2.6 per cent in the comparable general population (P < 0.05). The average age at death was 86 years (range, 62-98). ⋯ This series seems to suggest that non-cemented hemi-arthroplasty may be associated with an increased 3-months mortality rate of 21 per cent compared with 13.9 per cent (P < 0.05) for patients with the same age distribution. This may be due to a relatively high deep-infection rate following non-cemented hemi-arthroplasty.