Injury
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In the Swedish Fracture Register (SFR) clavicle fractures are classified according to the Robinson classification. This study aimed to evaluate the accuracy of the classification of clavicle fractures in the SFR. A secondary aim was to assess inter- and intraobserver agreement. ⋯ The accuracy of the classification of clavicle fractures in the SFR was only fair, whereas the inter- and intraobserver agreement among the expert raters was almost perfect. Accuracy in the SFR may be improved if the classification instructions in the SFR are updated by incorporating the original classification displacement criteria, both in text and in illustrated form.
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Lately, the care of severely injured patients in the United Kingdom has undergone a significant transformation. The establishment of regional trauma networks (RTN) with designated Major Trauma Centers (MTCs) and satellite hospitals called Trauma Units (TUs) has centralized the care of severely injured patients in the MTCs. Pelvic fractures are notoriously linked with hypovolemic shock or even death from excessive blood loss. ⋯ A significant increase of the median time to death (from 8hrs to 188hrs) was observed between the two eras. The cumulative mortality of severely injured patients with pelvic fractures decreased significantly from 17.8% to 12.4% (p<0.0001). The recorded improvement of survivorship in the subgroup of severely injured patients with a pelvic fracture (32% lower in the post-RTN than in the pre-RTN period: OR 1.32 (95% CI 1.21 - 1.44), following the first 5 years of established regional trauma networks in NHS England, is encouraging, and should be attributed to a wide range of factors that translate to all levels of trauma care.
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There is no consensus on which risk factors are most predictive for complications following open reduction internal fixation of distal radius fractures (ORIF-DRF) in an outpatient setting. This study is a complication risk analysis for ORIF-DRF in outpatient settings based on data obtained from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP). ⋯ Complications of ORIF-DRF in outpatient settings have many risk factors. This study provides surgeons with specific risk factors for possible complications following ORIF-DRF.
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Hip fractures are an increasingly common occurrence among the aging population. With increased life expectancy and advancements in medicine, patients sustaining a hip fracture are at an increasing risk of sustaining a contralateral hip fracture. Efforts are being made to better understand the environment of these hip fractures so that secondary prevention clinics and guidelines can be made to help prevent recurrent osteoporotic hip fractures. The estimated incidence of a contralateral hip fracture varies from 2 to 10% and is reportedly associated with a higher incidence of complications. Previous studies evaluating contralateral hip fractures compared a single cohort of patients sustaining a second hip fracture with patients who sustained only one hip fracture. We aimed to investigate the overall complications and associated costs as it relates to a patients first hip fracture and contrast this to the same patient's contralateral, second hip fractures. ⋯ Our study demonstrates there is no statistical difference between the first and second surgery regarding length of stay, medical or orthopedic complications and cost.