Injury
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Multicenter Study
The effect of early surgery on clinical outcomes in proximal femoral fracture patients receiving chronic anticoagulation: A japanese nationwide database study.
Surgery is often delayed in patients with proximal femoral fractures who receive oral anticoagulants, to avoid complications related to perioperative bleeding. However, surgery delay may increase the risk of postoperative mortality. Our primary goal was to understand whether anticoagulated patients benefit from early surgery in terms of survival and perioperative complications. ⋯ Age and comorbidities could explain higher rates of postoperative systemic complications in anticoagulated patients. Nevertheless, overall short-term mortality was similar between the groups. Early surgery was associated with higher rates of surgical complications in DOAC patients. When operated early, patients receiving warfarin were at an increased risk of mortality (p = 0.08) and perioperative blood transfusions.
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Multicenter Study
Etiologies of non-traumatic extremity compartment syndrome: A multi-center retrospective review.
Determine the etiologies of non-traumatic extremity compartment syndrome (NTECS), understand the demographics of NTECS patients, describe their diagnostic workup and treatment, and establish their rate and cause of in-hospital mortality. This is a retrospective cohort study of all patients diagnosed with NTECS at two level 1 trauma centers between January 2006 and December 2019. Data pertaining to the etiology of NTECS, patient demographics, diagnostic and treatment modalities, and in-hospital mortality were collected from electronic medical records. ⋯ While uncommon, many etiologies of NTECS exist and often manifest insidiously. 13% of patients who develop NTECS will require a skin graft / flap, or extremity amputation. 20 % of patients who develop NTECS die during their hospitalization. High clinical suspicion and future research in this field are necessary to improve clinical outcomes for these patients. Level IV: Retrospective review.
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Animal models are essential for orthopedic infectious research. However, only few models are currently able to capture the complex and multidisciplinary treatment approach for osteomyelitis. ⋯ Herein, we review a well-characterized and reproducible porcine model of human-scale one-stage revision of implant-associated osteomyelitis that can be used for robust preclinical testing of operative and post-operative interventions. The pros and cons of the model are discussed in the context of existing literature on large animal revision models.
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Multicenter Study
Prevalence of pelvic CT angiography (CTA) and angiographic embolization in geriatric patients with pelvic ring fractures presenting to two level I trauma centers.
Hemorrhage in osteoporotic pelvic ring fractures is a rare, but serious complication. Most bleeding comes from the bone or venous plexuses, but arterial injury does occur. The purpose of this study was to characterize a large geriatric pelvic fracture cohort and determine the prevalence of pelvic CT angiography (CTA) and subsequent need for arterial embolization. ⋯ Bleeding events in geriatric pelvic ring injuries is a previously under researched area of orthopedic trauma. Further research is needed to elucidate the exact pathomechanisms of arterial injury and what patients or injury patterns are most significantly associated. Specifically, larger cohort sizes and evaluating our existing cohort with different injury classification systems may yield useful results.
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Although vaccines have been hailed as one of the greatest advances in medicine based on their unparalleled cost-effectiveness in eradicating life-threatening infectious diseases, their role in orthopedic trauma-related infections is unclear. This is largely because vaccines are primarily made against pathogens that cause communicable diseases rather than opportunistic infections secondary to trauma, and most successful vaccines are against viruses rather than biofilm forming bacteria. Nonetheless, the tremendous costs to patients and healthcare systems warrant orthopedic trauma vaccine research, which has been a focal topic in recent international consensus meetings on musculoskeletal infection. This subject was also covered at the 2023 Osteosynthesis and Trauma Care Foundation (OTCF) meeting in Rome, Italy, and the purpose of this supplement article is to (1) highlight the osteoimmunology, animal models, translational research and clinical pilots that were discussed, (2) the proposed future directions that could lead to diagnostics and prognostics that are critically needed for evidence-based decision making, and (3) vaccines and passive-immunization strategies that could potentially be utilized to treat patients with orthopedic infections.