Following surgery to treat major trauma-related fractures, deep wound infection rates are high. It is not known if negative pressure wound therapy can reduce infection rates in this setting. OBJECTIVE To assess outcomes in patients who have incisions resulting from surgery for lower limb fractures related to major trauma and were treated with either incisional negative pressure wound therapy or standard wound dressing. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A randomized clinical trial conducted at 24 trauma hospitals representing the UK Major Trauma Network that included 1548 patients aged 16 years or older who underwent surgery for a lower limb fracture caused by major trauma from
Sedimentary organic matter behaves as sedimentary particles and this study attempts to interpret its occurrence in the Palaeocene sands and mudstones of the Forties Field of the North Sea. New nomenclature and classification of this palynodebris are presented and are used to make quantitative counts of the palynodebris from nearly 600 samples of known sedimentary character. The new categories are further refined by objective testing of the data by Principal Components Analysis and Cluster Analysis. It is argued that two types of sedimentary organic matter are of particular value because they are preferentially deposited in different environments: palynowafers are most commonly deposited in the submarine fan lobes and channel complexes and amorphous matter occurs mostly in the lower energy basin plain sediments.
Fractures of the distal radius are commonly treated using volar locking plates. Several complications have been associated with this procedure, including extensor tendon irritation and rupture. It has been suggested that prominence of screws past the dorsal cortex may contribute to this complication. This study aimed to determine the ability of the skyline view to demonstrate screws penetrating the dorsal cortex. A volar locking plate was applied to a synthetic forearm model. Lateral, oblique, and skyline views were obtained, with the distal screws both beneath and 1 mm beyond the dorsal cortex. The images were shown to orthopaedic trainees who were asked to decide if screws penetrated the dorsal cortex. Subjects were correct in 83% of cases using the skyline view compared with 77% (p = 0.05, lateral) and 50% (p < 0.01, oblique). This study demonstrates the skyline view of the distal radius could be a useful and accurate addition to routine intraoperative fluoroscopy views.
AimsType IIIB open tibial fractures are devastating high-energy injuries. At initial debridement, the surgeon will often be faced with large bone fragments with tenuous, if any, soft-tissue attachments. Conventionally these are discarded to avoid infection. We aimed to determine if orthoplastic reconstruction using mechanically relevant devitalized bone (ORDB) was associated with an increased infection rate in type IIIB open tibial shaft fractures.Patient and MethodsThis was a consecutive cohort study of 113 patients, who had sustained type IIIB fractures of the tibia following blunt trauma, over a four-year period in a level 1 trauma centre. The median age was 44.3 years (interquartile range (IQR) 28.1 to 65.9) with a median follow-up of 1.7 years (IQR 1.2 to 2.1). There were 73 male patients and 40 female patients. The primary outcome measures were deep infection rate and number of operations. The secondary outcomes were nonunion and flap failure.ResultsIn all, 44 patients had ORDB as part of their reconstruction, with the remaining 69 not requiring it. Eight out of 113 patients (7.1%) developed a deep infection (ORDB 1/44, non-ORDB 7/69). The median number of operations was two. A total of 16/242 complication-related reoperations were undertaken (6.6%), with 2/16 (12.5%) occurring in the ORDB group.ConclusionIn the setting of an effective orthoplastic approach to type IIIB open diaphyseal tibial fractures, using mechanically relevant debrided devitalized bone fragments in the definitive reconstruction appears to be safe. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2019;101-B:1002–1008.
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