Unfallchirurgie
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Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
[Pelvic fractures in the Kiel trauma surgery clinic. A one-year evaluation].
48 injuries to the pelvis were treated from January 1991 through December 1991. We found 45 fractures of the pelvic ring with associated acetabular fractures in 15 cases and three isolated acetabular lesions. 19 injuries were caused by car accidents, 18 fractures resulted from a fall, especially in older patients. Isolated fractures of the pelvis occurred in 18 cases. ⋯ There were 14 cases in which we found sacral fractures as an additional dorsal lesion. Nine of 14 sacral fractures were recognized only by CT examination. In eleven cases the conventional radiographs showed simple anterior pelvic ring fractures while the CT examination revealed an additional lesion of the sacroiliac joint in nine of these cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
[Effect of continuous change in axial position in treatment of post-traumatic lung failure (ARDS). A clinical study].
In the treatment of posttraumatic adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) so far no breakthrough has been achieved. In several cases of severe ARDS we have seen improvements of lung function by means of continuous body positioning. We therefore compared the effect of kinetic positioning (KIN) on lung function and hemodynamics in ARDS patients to conventional (KON) supine positioning. 22 ARDS patients with multiple trauma treated by supportive continuous body positioning (KIN) (KCI-Mediscus) and without continuous positioning (KON) were investigated daily. ⋯ We found no hemodynamic side effects from continuous body positioning. In ARDS-patients submitted to body positioning oxygenation and pulmonary shunt improved significantly and were significantly better compared to those with conventional supine positioning. Continuous body positioning appears to represent a promising supportive treatment regimen in posttraumatic ARDS.