In type-II fractures of the odontoid process, the treatment is either conservative in a halo vest or primary surgical stabilisation. Since nonunion, requiring prolonged immobilisation or late surgery, is common in patients treated in a halo vest, the identification of those in whom this treatment is likely to fail is important. We reviewed the data of 69 patients with acute type-II fractures of the odontoid process treated in a halo vest. The mean follow-up was 12 months. Conservative treatment was successful, resulting in bony union in 32 (46%) patients. Anterior dislocation, gender and age were unrelated to nonunion. However, nonunion did correlate with a fracture gap (> 1 mm), posterior displacement (> 5 mm), delayed start of treatment (> 4 days) and posterior redisplacement (> 2 mm). We conclude that patients presenting with these risk factors are unlikely to achieve bony union by treatment in a halo vest. They deserve careful attention during the follow-up period and should also be considered as candidates for primary surgical stabilisation.
Background. Patients diagnosed with osteosarcoma in Finland during 1991 -2005 were retrospectively analyzed in a nationwide, population-based study. We focused on the incidence, treatment and outcome of osteosarcoma patients. We also evaluated the value of known prognostic parameters. Material and methods. Osteosarcomas were retrieved from the fi les of the national Finnish Cancer Registry. Only patients with histologically confi rmed osteosarcoma were included in the analysis. Histological review was performed. Results. The study consists of 144 osteosarcoma patients with a mean follow-up of 9.8 years for survivors. Mean annual incidence of histologically confi rmed osteosarcoma was 1.8 new osteosarcomas per million. The 10-year sarcoma-specifi c survival for the whole population was 63% and 73% for patients with local disease at presentation. Overall limb-salvage rate was 73% and local control was 84% for patients with a peripheral tumor. Development of local recurrence and major deviation from the chemotherapy protocol were signifi cant adverse factors for sarcoma-specifi c survival in multivariate analysis. Conclusion. The present nationwide and population-based study is our second report of treatment and prognosis of osteosarcoma in Finland. With modern chemotherapy the prognosis of local osteosarcoma has improved in Finland from 47% during 1971 -1980 and 65% during 1981 -1990 at fi ve years to the present 73% during 1991 -2005 at 10 years. The 10-year sarcoma-specifi c survival of 73% is excellent and comparable to results reported with contemporary treatment protocols in high-volume centers. However, improvement in limb-salvage rate and local control probably requires centralization of treatment of this rare disease.
This study compares MRI with examination under anaesthesia to surgical findings in evaluating soft tissue injuries in acute multi-ligament knee trauma. Preoperative MRI was done for 44 patients who underwent surgery for grade III ACL and grade III medial collateral ligament (MCL) injury. In 21 cases both ACL and MCL were treated surgically, but in 23 only ACL. Intra-operative and MRI findings were compared. Accuracy of MRI for medial meniscal tears was 88.6%, sensitivity 80%, and specificity 91.2%; accuracy for lateral meniscal tears was 72.7%, sensitivity 55% and specificity 87.5%. Accuracy and sensitivity for severity of ACL tear was 93.2% and of MCL tear 86.4%. In 88.6% of the knees, bone bruises were visible, with anterolateral femoral and posterolateral tibial bone bruise being the most common. MRI revealed no chondral lesion, but arthroscopy revealed 11. In combined ACL-MCL ruptures, the incidence of concomitant injuries is high and the injuries are best detected with MRI.
In patients with severe liver injury, associated severe splenic injury favors early laparotomy and damage control strategy. Patients who arrive in shock or have an associated severe splenic injury should not be managed nonoperatively. In addition to severe head injury, uncontrollable bleeding from the liver injury is still a major cause of early death.
This study was conducted to assess occurrence and distribution of burst fractures as well as common accident mechanisms and the associated neurologic deficit. Using picture archiving and communications system, all emergency multidetector computed tomography studies over 34 months were retrieved and evaluated for burst fractures by two radiologists by consensus. Initial neurological findings were retrieved from patients' medical records. One hundred fifty-two patients (112 male) with a total of 169 burst fractures were found. In both genders, the incidence of burst fractures peaked at the thoracolumbar junction and between levels T5 and T8. In 10% of cases, more than one burst fracture was seen, thereof 53% on noncontiguous levels. Main accident mechanisms were falls, traffic, and sports. Neurological deficit was highest in patients with burst fractures of the cervical spine, independent of accident mechanism, and lowest in thoracolumbar junction fractures. Burst fractures occur frequently in high energy traumas and are most commonly associated with falling and traffic accidents. Multiple burst fractures occur in 10% of cases, half thereof on noncontiguous levels.
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