The smartphone is an under-utilized tool to enhance patient-physician communication, increase satisfaction, and improve quality of care. Patients were enthusiastic about app features that are often included in patient health portals, but ranked orthopaedic educational features lowest. Further study is required to elucidate how best to use orthopaedic apps as physician-directed educational opportunities to promote patient satisfaction and quality of care.
Lysis of adhesions utilizing SALKA after ORIF about the knee improves knee ROM immediately post-operatively and in the short-term follow-up. However, there is a decrease in the gains in the range of motion over time. Patients should be counseled as such. Lysis of adhesions utilizing arthroscopic techniques may provide a favorable alternative to open quadricepsplasty.
Nicotine is harmful to many bodily systems; however, the effects of nicotine on intra-substance tendon healing remain largely unexplored. The purpose of this study was to examine the functional, structural, and biomechanical effects of nicotine on the healing of Achilles tendons in rats after an acute full-thickness injury. Sixty Sprague-Dawley rats were enrolled in this study. Half were exposed to 0.9% saline and half to 61ng/mL of nicotine for 3 months via subcutaneous osmotic pumps. At 3 months, all rats underwent blunt full thickness transection of the left Achilles tendon and were immobilized for one week in plantarflexion. In-vivo assays were conducted prior to injury, at 21 days, and at 42 days post-injury and included the following: functional limb assessment, passive joint mechanics, and vascular evaluation. Rats were sacrificed at 21 and 42 days for biomechanical testing and histologic evaluation. Rats exposed to nicotine demonstrated decreased vascularity, greater alteration in gait mechanics, and increased passive ROM of the ankle joint. Biomechanically, the nicotine tendons failed at lower maximum loads, were less stiff, had smaller cross-sectional areas and had altered viscoelastic properties. Histologically, nicotine tendons demonstrated decreased vessel density at the injury site.
Background:
The saline load test has previously been shown to be an effective tool to diagnose traumatic arthrotomies, but no studies have assessed the test’s efficacy in the wrist. The purpose of this study was to investigate the amount of fluid required during a saline load test to detect intra-articular wrist involvement of traumatic wounds with high sensitivity.
Methods:
A cadaveric study was conducted using 7 thawed, fresh-frozen forequarter amputations from 7 different donors (3 male, 4 female). Specimen age (mean: 67.7 y, range: 52 to 80 y), laterality (1 right, 6 left), body weight (mean: 164.3 lbs, range: 100 to 223 lbs), and wrist range of motion (ROM) was assessed before testing. The wrist capsule was punctured with an 11-blade scalpel through the 6R radiocarpal portal site under fluoroscopic guidance to ensure the injury was intra-articular. A 19-G needle was then placed through the 3,4 radiocarpal portal site and confirmed with fluoroscopy to ensure intra-articular placement. Normal saline was then injected at a steady rate into the 3,4 radiocarpal portal site until extravasation of the saline was observed from the 6R radiocarpal arthrotomy site. The volume of saline required for extravasation from the 6R radiocarpal arthrotomy was recorded as the volume required to detect the arthrotomy. A plot of saline volumes (by percentile) was created, and a logarithmic distribution was calculated. A Wilcoxon rank-sum test was used to compare injection volumes between male and female specimens, and Pearson Coefficients were used to determine any correlations between injection volume and ROM.
Results:
The average amount of saline that resulted in extravasation was 4 mL (range: 2 to 7 mL). In order to identify 75%, 90%, 95%, and 99% of the simulated wrist arthrotomies, 5 (95% confidence interval: 3-7), 6 (4-9), 7 (4-10), and 9 (5-14) mL were required, respectively. Pretest ROM did not correlate with saline volume.
Conclusions:
This study demonstrates the efficacy of the saline load test in detecting traumatic arthrotomies of the wrist joint with 95% sensitivity after loading 7 mL of saline. Prompt and accurate diagnosis of traumatic arthrotomies is paramount to guide management and optimize postinjury outcomes.
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