Clinics in podiatric medicine and surgery
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Clin Podiatr Med Surg · Apr 2003
ReviewPsychosocial management of the foot and ankle surgery patient.
Currently, many patients undergo surgery when they and their families are not prepared or resilient enough to recover fully, predisposing them to poor outcomes. These poor outcomes lead to missed work, patient depression, chronic pain, litigation, and surgeon frustration. Sometimes these individuals require the surgeon's oversight and are more likely to improve with rapid vocational therapy, physical therapy, and aggressive, continuous chronic-pain management. ⋯ The ABLE Presurgical Assessment Tool and related treatment strategies provide foot and ankle surgeons with an easy-to-use, research-based application to better screen and manage their surgical patients. The goal of this review and assessment tool is not to determine a quantitative level of risk. Instead, the authors hope to facilitate a surgeon's awareness of critical preoperative risk factors and provide a tool to efficiently identify these factors and arrange appropriate treatment as needed.
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Clin Podiatr Med Surg · Apr 2003
Review Case ReportsDeep venous thrombosis risk assessment, incidence, and prophylaxis in foot and ankle surgery.
As discussed in this review, DVT and PE are dangerous clinical diagnoses that can occur following foot and ankle surgery. The authors have provided a clinical protocol, a risk assessment tool, and treatment guidelines for this condition that can be applied to the everyday practice of foot and ankle surgeons. Unlike recommendations in previous studies, the authors believe that podiatric and orthopedic surgeons operating on the foot and ankle should evaluate each patient carefully and consider pharmacologic prophylaxis against DVT formation when significant risk factors are present.
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There are many options for perioperative pain control available to surgeons. Given these options, adequate levels of analgesia should be achieved and maintained in all surgical patients. Data suggest that analgesia may be improved by combining different analgesic approaches. ⋯ A multimodal recovery program consists of three major components: (1) early mobilization, (2) complete perioperative analgesia, and (3) early oral nutrition. The goal of multimodal programs is to accelerate patient rehabilitation and reduce hospital stays. Balanced multimodal programs are the present and future of perioperative pain control and will enhance patient care.
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Clin Podiatr Med Surg · Apr 2003
Review Case ReportsPostoperative cryotherapy: risks versus benefits of continuous-flow cryotherapy units.
Continuous-flow cryotherapy units have been proved to decrease pain, inflammation, swelling, blood loss, and narcotic usage in the postoperative setting. Complications related to cryotherapy are extremely rare (estimated at 0.00225%) but can be devastating. ⋯ All members involved with care of the patient, including the physician, nursing staff, patient, and patient's family and caregivers, should take an active roll in monitoring the foot for signs and symptoms of cold injury. Continuous-flow cold therapy should be discontinued when capillary refill time is greater than 5 seconds.
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External fixation as a modality is a versatile and minimally invasive stabilization option that should not be forgotten even as new and specially designed implants for nearly each bone become more fashionable. As a temporary traction device, the external fixator can help condition the soft tissues and, if closed reduction was sufficient, it can stay in place for definitive treatment. ⋯ External fixation instead of plaster cast allows for better care of skin and soft tissues. External fixation also has its advantages as a minimally invasive external compression device in specific indications for arthrodesis, especially in infected cases.