The American journal of orthopedics
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Comparative Study
Increased neurologic complications associated with postoperative epidural analgesia after tibial fracture fixation.
A retrospective study of 63 patients with surgically treated tibial fractures was performed. The type of postoperative analgesia was compared against the type of fracture, mechanism of injury, type of fixation, adequacy of pain control, and incidence of neurologic complications. The only difference observed among all of these comparisons was that patients given postoperative epidural analgesia with local anesthetics were 4.1 times more likely to have a neurologic complication than those receiving systemic narcotics (P = 0.0496). We conclude that patients who have undergone surgical treatment of tibial plateau or shaft fractures have a significantly higher risk of developing neurologic complications when post-operative epidural analgesia is used.
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A hybrid acromioclavicular joint fracture-dislocation in which an intra-articular fracture of the distal clavicle coexisted with a coracoclavicular ligament injury is described. The proposed mechanism of injury is a fall on the point of the shoulder that simultaneously drives the scapula both anteriorly and inferiorly. ⋯ The inferiorly acromioclavicular ligament was still attached to this distal clavicle fragment. The inferiorly directed force ruptured the coracoclavicular and superior acromioclavicular ligaments.