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      The effect of time to definitive treatment on the rate of nonunion and infection in open fractures.

      Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma
      Adult, Female, Femoral Fractures, complications, surgery, Fractures, Malunited, etiology, Fractures, Open, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Radius Fractures, Regression Analysis, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Tibial Fractures, Time Factors, Ulna Fractures, Wound Infection, Wounds, Nonpenetrating

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          Abstract

          To determine the association between time to definitive surgical management and the rates of nonunion and infection in open fractures resulting from blunt trauma. To determine the association of other clinical determinants with these same adverse events. Retrospective review of a consecutive series of open long bone fractures. Referral trauma center with transport times often extending beyond eight hours from the time of injury. A total of 227 skeletally mature patients with 241 open long bone fractures were treated between January 1996 and December 1998; 215 fractures were available for review at a minimum of twelve months postinjury. Medical charts of all patients were reviewed using a standardized data collection form. All available records and radiograph reports were inspected. All cases were followed to clinical and radiographic union of the fracture or until a definitive procedure for nonunion or deep infection was carried out. Occurrence of deep infections or nonunions after fracture treatment. The mean time to definitive treatment was eight hours and twenty-five minutes (range 1 hour 35 minutes to 30 hours 40 minutes). Forty patients went on to nonunion, and twenty developed a deep infection. In the final multivariate regression model, time was not a significant factor in predicting either nonunion or infection (p > 0.05). The strongest determinants for nonunion were found to be presence of infection and grade of injury (p < 0.05). The strongest predictors for the development of a deep infection were fracture grade and a lower extremity fracture (p < 0.05). The risk of developing an adverse outcome was not increased by aggressive debridement/lavage and definitive fixation up to thirteen hours from the time of injury when early prophylactic antibiotic administration and open fracture first aid were instituted.

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          Early microsurgical reconstruction of complex trauma of the extremities.

          M Godina (1986)
          Five hundred and thirty-two patients underwent microsurgical reconstruction following trauma to their extremities. They were divided into three groups for the purpose of review. Group 1 underwent free-flap transfer within 72 hours of the injury, group 2 between 72 hours and 3 months of the injury, and group 3 between 3 months and 12.6 years, with a mean of 3.4 years. The results were analyzed with respect to flap failure, infection, bone-healing time, length of hospital stay, and number of operative procedures. The flap failure rate was 0.75 percent in group 1, 12 percent in group 2, and 9.5 percent in group 3 (p less than 0.0005 early versus delayed; p less than 0.0025 early versus late). Postoperative infection occurred in 1.5 percent of group 1, 17.5 percent of group 2, and 6 percent of group 3. Bone-healing time was 6.8 months in group 1, 12.3 months in group 2, and 29 months in group 3. The average length of total hospital stay was 27 days for group 1, 130 days for group 2, and 256 days for group 3. The number of operations averaged 1.3 for group 1, 4.1 for group 2, and 7.8 for group 3.
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            Risk of infection after open fracture of the arm or leg.

            Two hundred forty consecutive patients admitted for operative treatment of an open fracture of the arm or leg were followed up prospectively for the development of fracture infection. The independent risk of fracture infection was increased in patients with grade IIIB or IIIC fractures, internal or external fixation, lower-leg fracture, any blood transfusion, or injuries resulting from motorcycle accidents or motor vehicle-pedestrian accidents. By stepwise multivariate logistic regression, the most significant risk factors were the grade of the fracture, internal or external fixation, and fractures of the lower leg. These risk factors all represent local wound characteristics, and we conclude that the most important actions by the surgeon to prevent infection involve local wound care. There was no relation between the timing of antibiotic administration or duration of antibiotic therapy and infection risk.
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              Osteomyelitis in grade II and III open tibia fractures with late debridement.

              The purpose of this study was to compare the incidence of infection in grade II and III open tibia fractures with respect to early and late debridement. All grade II and III tibia fractures treated between January 1988 and January 1992 were reviewed. Forty-seven fractures (25 grade II and 22 grade III) in 46 patients were eligible for entry into the study. In all grade II and III fractures, one of 15 fractures (7%) debrided in 5 h after injury became infected (p < 0.03). Overt manifestations of infection did not appear until an average of 4.8 months from the time of injury, and the infecting organisms correlated with the initial cultures in only 25% of the cases. Negative postdebridement cultures did not preclude subsequent infection. The Injury Severity Score did not appear to correlate with increased risk of subsequent osteomyelitis.
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