Annales chirurgiae et gynaecologiae
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All records of 652 patients treated for blunt chest trauma at Ullevål Hospital, Surgical Department 3, during the period 1973-1981 were analyzed for factors predictive of prognosis. Mortality for the whole group was 7.7%. Age, blood pressure on admission, the number of fractured ribs, the need for blood transfusions and the need for artificial ventilation were the most important predictors of prognosis. ⋯ The incidence of bronchial infection, septicaemia and hypercoagulability was significantly higher for patients on ventilators than for patients breathing spontaneously. Mortality increased when septicaemia or bronchial infection was present (30.8 and 21.9%, respectively). The injury severity score (ISS) for the 50 patients who died in the hospital was similar to that of some other reports.
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The number and type of reoperations after fractures of the proximal femur was studied in Jokilaakso Regional Hospital, Finland, from 1970 to 1981. Reoperations after fractures of the femoral neck occurred in 32% (24/74), in trochanteric fractures in 13% (6/48). In fractures of the femoral neck 38% (9/24) of the reoperations were performed during the first postoperative year, in trochanteric fractures half of the cases. The average time of hospital stay for reoperation was 19 days.