Injury
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Focused assessment sonography for trauma (FAST) performed in the prehospital setting may improve trauma care by influencing treatment decisions and reducing time to definitive care, but its accuracy and benefits remain uncertain. This systematic review evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of prehospital FAST in detecting hemoperitoneum and its effects on prehospital time and time to definitive diagnosis or treatment. ⋯ Prehospital FAST had a low sensitivity but a very high specificity to identify hemoperitoneum and reduced time-to-diagnostics or interventions, without increasing prehospital times, in patients with a high probability of abdominal bleeding. Its effect on mortality is still under-investigated.
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The purpose of this study was to apply both the fragility index (FI) and fragility quotient (FQ) to evaluate the degree of statistical fragility in the distal fibular fracture (DFF) literature. We hypothesized that the dichotomous outcomes within the DFF literature are statistically fragile. ⋯ The randomized controlled trials in the peer-reviewed distal fibular fracture literature may not be as robust as previously thought, as incorporating statistical analyses solely on a P value threshold is misleading. Standardized reporting of the P value, FI and FQ can help the clinician reliably draw conclusions based on the fragility of outcome measures.
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Fracture of the medial end of the clavicle is very rare. There is no consensus on the standard surgical strategy for medial clavicle fracture, and treatment is challenging. This study aimed to retrospectively evaluate the efficacy of internal plate fixation for displaced medial clavicle fracture. ⋯ Both locking plates and hook plates are effective in treating displaced medial clavicle fracture. A locking plate is recommended when there is enough bone stock in the medial fragment for stable fixation. A clavicle hook plate is recommended for cases in which the medial clavicle fracture is too small, comminuted, or has signs of sternoclavicular joint instability.
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Rotatory laxity acceleration still lacks objective classification due to interval grading superposition, resulting in a biased pivot shift grading prior to the Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) reconstruction. However, data analysis might help improve data grading in the operative room. Therefore, we described the improvement of the pivot-shift categorization in Gerdy's acceleration under anesthesia prior to ACL surgery using a support vector machine (SVM) classification, surgeon, and literature reference. ⋯ The multiclass SVM classifier improves the acceleration categorization of the (+), (++), and (+++) pivot shift sign prior to the ACL surgery in agreement with surgeon criteria.