In Africa the amount of joint replacement surgery is increasing, but the indications for operation and the age of the patients are considerably different from those in the developed world. New centres with variable standards of care and training of the surgeons are performing these procedures and it is important that a proper audit of this work is undertaken. In Malawi, we have pioneered a Registry which includes all joint replacements that have been carried out in the country. The data gathered include the age, gender, indication for operation, the prosthesis used, the surgical approach, the use of bone graft, the type of cement, pressurising systems and the thromboprophylaxis used. All patients have their clinical scores recorded pre-operatively and then after three and six months and at one year. Before operation all patients are counselled and on consent their HIV status is established allowing analysis of the effect of HIV on successful joint replacement. To date, 73 total hip replacements (THRs) have been carried out in 58 patients by four surgeons in four different hospitals. The most common indications for THR were avascular necrosis (35 hips) and osteoarthritis (22 hips). The information concerning 20 total knee replacements has also been added to the Registry.
Open tibia fractures are common injuries, particularly in developing countries.Pedestrian or bicycle to motor car contact is the most common mechanism.These injuries result in high morbidity and often long-term disability.HIV infection complicates open fractures by raising the incidence of infectionin the open wound (5 of 7 patients in our series). This risk may be compounded if internal fixation techniques are used (5 of 12 HIV patients with internal fixation of any open fracture). There is also a suggestion that HIV may delay bone union (4 of 7 patients united at 6 months). External fixation offers an alternative method of fracture stabilisation. It avoids the risks associated with putting metal-ware in the wound, but creates a new issue of pin track sepsis. We found that pin track infection was more common in patients with HIV, but the rate at which pins required removal was 7%. We consider external fixation to be a lower-risk strategy than internal fixation in such patients but open fracture wound sepsis remains a problem. We have not yet demonstrated a difference in severity or frequency of complications in patients of low CD4 count, but logically one expects septic complications to increase as CD4 count falls. Antiretroviral medication decreases viral load and elevates the CD4 count. Research is underway regarding potential effectiveness of such drugs in reducing wound and fracture healing complications. Above all, meticulous and timely all-round care is required to achieve satisfactory results in immunecompromised patients. This includes, debridement, bony stability, and soft-tissue reconstruction.
The following investigation was undertaken at the request of the War Office Committee on Antityphoid Inoculation, to ascertain the nature and degree of the changes that occur in the blood after inoculation, and to determine the extent to which these changes are influenced by differences in the dosage of the vaccine.
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