420 results on '"Rahbek, Ole"'
Search Results
152. Sealing effect of hydroxyapatite coating:A 12 month study in canines
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Rahbek, Ole, Overgaard, Søren, Jensen, Thomas Bo, Bendix, Knud, and Søballe, Kjeld
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- 2000
153. Hemiepiphysiodesis: similar treatment time for tension-band plating and for stapling
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Gottliebsen, Martin, primary, Rahbek, Ole, additional, Hvid, Ivan, additional, Davidsen, Michael, additional, Hellfritzsch, Michel Bach, additional, and Møller-Madsen, Bjarne, additional
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- 2013
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154. Epidural analgesia is superior to local infiltration analgesia in children with cerebral palsy undergoing unilateral hip reconstruction.
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Kjeldgaard Pedersen, Line, Nikolajsen, Lone, Rahbek, Ole, Uldall Duch, Birgitte, and Møller-Madsen, Bjarne
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CEREBRAL palsy ,HIP surgery ,INTRAVENOUS therapy ,LOCAL anesthesia ,NARCOTICS ,ORAL drug administration ,POSTOPERATIVE pain ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PLASTIC surgery ,PAIN management ,VISUAL analog scale ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,BLIND experiment ,EPIDURAL analgesia ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background and purpose — Treatment of postoperative pain in children with cerebral palsy (CP) is a major challenge. We investigated the effect of epidural analgesia, high-volume local infiltration analgesia (LIA), and an approximated placebo control on early postoperative pain in children with CP who were undergoing unilateral hip reconstruction. Patients and methods — Between 2009 and 2014, we included 18 children with CP. The first part of the study was a randomized double-blind trial with allocation to either LIA or placebo for postoperative pain management, in addition to intravenous or oral analgesia. In the second part of the study, the children were consecutively included for postoperative pain management with epidural analgesia in addition to intravenous or oral analgesia. The primary outcome was postoperative pain 4 h postoperatively using 2 pain assessment tools (r-FLACC and VAS-OBS) ranging from 0 to 10. The secondary outcome was opioid consumption over the 21-h study period. Results — The mean level of pain 4 h postoperatively was lower in the epidural group (r-FLACC: 0.7; VAS-OBS: 0.6) than in both the LIA group (r-FLACC: 4.8, p = 0.01; VAS-OBS: 5.2, p = 0.02) and the placebo group (r-FLACC: 5.2, p = 0.01; VAS-OBS: 6.5, p < 0.001). Corrected for body weight, the mean opioid consumption was lower in the epidural group than in the LIA group and the placebo group (both p < 0.001). Interpretation — Epidural analgesia is superior to local infiltration analgesia for early postoperative pain management in children with cerebral palsy who undergo unilateral hip reconstruction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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155. Similar growth plate morphology in stapling and tension band plating hemiepiphysiodesis: A porcine experimental histomorphometric study
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Gottliebsen, Martin, primary, Rahbek, Ole, additional, Poulsen, Hanne Damgaard, additional, and Møller-Madsen, Bjarne, additional
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- 2012
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156. Superior 11-Year Survival but Higher Polyethylene Wear of Hydroxyapatite-Coated Mallory-Head Cups
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Gottliebsen, Martin, primary, Rahbek, Ole, additional, Ottosen, Per F., additional, Søballe, Kjeld, additional, and Stilling, Maiken, additional
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- 2012
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157. Superior fixation of pegged trabecular metal over screw-fixed pegged porous titanium fiber mesh
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Stilling, Maiken, primary, Madsen, Frank, additional, Odgaard, Anders, additional, Rømer, Lone, additional, Andersen, Niels Trolle, additional, Rahbek, Ole, additional, and Søballe, Kjeld, additional
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- 2011
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158. Knee flexion influences periprosthetic BMD measurement in the tibia
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Stilling, Maiken, primary, Søballe, Kjeld, additional, Larsen, Kristian, additional, Andersen, Niels Trolle, additional, and Rahbek, Ole, additional
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- 2010
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159. Analysis of polyethylene wear in plain radiographs
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Stilling, Maiken, primary, Søballe, Kjeld, additional, Andersen, Niels Trolle, additional, Larsen, Kristian, additional, and Rahbek, Ole, additional
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- 2009
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160. Bone compaction enhances fixation of hydroxyapatite‐coated implants in a canine gap model
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Kold, Søren, primary, Rahbek, Ole, additional, Zippor, Berit, additional, Bechtold, Joan E., additional, and Søballe, Kjeld, additional
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- 2005
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161. Bone Compaction Enhances Fixation of Weightbearing Titanium Implants
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Kold, Søren, primary, Rahbek, Ole, additional, Vestermark, Marianne, additional, Overgaard, Søren, additional, and Søballe, Kjeld, additional
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- 2005
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162. No adverse effects of bone compaction on implant fixation after resorption of compacted bone in dogs
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Kold, Søren, primary, Rahbek, Ole, additional, Zippor, Berit, additional, and Søballe, Kjeld, additional
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- 2005
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163. Superior sealing effect of hydroxyapatite in porous-coated implants
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Rahbek, Ole, primary, Kold, Søren, additional, Bendix, Knud, additional, Overgaard, Søren, additional, and Søballe, Kjeld, additional
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- 2005
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164. Compacted cancellous bone has a spring-back effect
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Kold, Søren, primary, Bechtold, Joan, additional, Ding, Ming, additional, Chareancholvanich, Keerati, additional, Rahbek, Ole, additional, and Søballe, Kjeld, additional
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- 2003
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165. Osteogenic protein 1 device increases bone formation and bone graft resorption around cementless implants
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Jensen, Thomas B, primary, Overgaard, Søren, additional, Lind, Martin, additional, Rahbek, Ole, additional, Bünger, Cody, additional, and Søballe, Kjeld, additional
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- 2002
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166. Sealing effect of hydroxyapatite coating: A 12-month study in canines
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Rahbek, Ole, primary, Overgaard, Søren, additional, Jensen, Thomas B., additional, Bendix, Knud, additional, and Søballe, Kjeld, additional
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- 2000
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167. Improved fixation of porous-coated versus grit-blasted surface texture of hydroxyapatite-coated implants in dogs
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Overgaard, Søren, primary, Lind, Martin, additional, Rahbek, Ole, additional, Bünger, Cody, additional, and Søballe, Kjeld, additional
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- 1997
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168. The use of asynchronous digital two-way communication between patients and healthcare professionals after hospital discharge: A scoping review.
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Jensen, Lili Worre Høpfner, Ghaffari, Arash, Rahbek, Ole, Dinesen, Birthe, and Kold, Søren
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TWO-way communication , *DIGITAL communications , *MEDICAL personnel , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *MEDICAL communication - Abstract
This scoping review aimed to identify and map how asynchronous digital two-way communication is used between patients and healthcare professionals after hospital discharge, as well as identify facilitators and barriers to implementation. Following the JBI guidance for scoping reviews, we searched seven databases on August 29, 2022. Rayyan was employed for screening the articles, and data were extracted using a predefined and iteratively modified data extraction tool. Facilitators and barriers were systematically categorized according to the domains and constructs of the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). Forty articles were included, primarily published between 2012 and 2022 and from the USA. In the majority of articles (77.5 %), asynchronous digital two-way communication was a part of a larger eHealth intervention. Nurses were the healthcare professionals most frequently mentioned as answering patients' messages (35 %) with response times sparsely described, and varying between four hours and three days. Efforts done to implement asynchronous digital two-way communication were only mentioned in 37.5 % of the articles. Facilitators included easy access, convenience, less disturbance, shared expectations for use and communication with professionals familiar to the patient. Barriers involved fear of overlooking health issues, risk of answers being delayed, technical issues and unclear response times. There is a gap in the literature between studies that describe the use of asynchronous digital two-way communication after hospital discharge exhaustively and reports on facilitators and barriers to implementation. This scoping review serves as an overview of the current use of asynchronous digital two-way communication after hospital discharge and sheds light on facilitators and barriers to implementation pertinent to this specific period. • Asynchronous digital communication post-discharge is used for physical illnesses. • Descriptions of organization of use and implementation efforts are lacking. • Most often nurses are respondents of messages, and team-based approaches are uncommon. • Facilitators involved shared expectations, clear response times, and communication with known professionals. • Barriers related to fear of overlooking health issues, technical problems and negative feelings towards the technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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169. Fully automatic system to detect and segment the proximal femur in pelvic radiographic images for Legg–Calvé–Perthes disease.
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Ditmer, Sofie, Dwenger, Nicole, Jensen, Louise N., Kim, Harry, Boel, Rikke V., Ghaffari, Arash, and Rahbek, Ole
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CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks , *FEMUR , *FEMUR head , *COMPUTER vision , *IMAGE analysis , *IDIOPATHIC femoral necrosis - Abstract
This study aimed to develop a method using computer vision techniques to accurately detect and delineate the proximal femur in radiographs of Legg–Calvé–Perthes disease (LCPD) patients. Currently, evaluating femoral head deformity, a crucial predictor of LCPD outcomes, relies on unreliable categorical and qualitative classifications. To address this limitation, we employed the pretrained object detection model YOLOv5 to detect the proximal femur on over 2000 radiographs, including images of shoulders and chests, to enhance robustness and generalizability. Subsequently, we utilized the U‐Net convolutional neural network architecture for image segmentation of the proximal femur in more than 800 manually annotated images of stage IV LCPD. The results demonstrate outstanding performance, with the object detection model achieving high accuracy (mean average precision of 0.99) and the segmentation model attaining an accuracy score of 91%, dice coefficient of 0.75, and binary IoU score of 0.85 on the held‐out test set. The proposed fully automatic proximal femur detection and segmentation system offers a promising approach to accurately detect and delineate the proximal femoral bone contour in radiographic images, which is essential for further image analysis in LCPD patients. Clinical significance: This study highlights the potential of computer vision techniques for enhancing the reliability of Legg–Calvé–Perthes disease staging and outcome prediction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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170. Guided growth: mechanism and reversibility of modulation.
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Gottliebsen, Martin, Shiguetomi-Medina, Juan Manuel, Rahbek, Ole, and Moller-Madsen, Bjarne
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BONE growth , *SKELETAL maturity , *GROWTH plate , *PEDIATRIC orthopedics , *PEDIATRIC surgery , *LEG length inequality in children , *LEG abnormalities , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
In paediatric orthopaedics, deformities and discrepancies in length of bones are key problems that commonly need to be addressed in daily practice. An understanding of the physiology behind developing bones is crucial for planning treatment. Modulation of the growing bone can be performed in a number of ways. Here, we discuss the principles and mechanisms behind the techniques. Historically, the first procedures were destructive in their mechanism but reversible techniques were later developed with stapling of the growth plate being the gold standard treatment for decades. It has historically been used for both angular deformities and control of overall bone length. Today, tension band plating has partially overtaken stapling but this technique also carries a risk of complications. The diverging screws in these implants are probably mainly useful for hemiepiphysiodesis. We also discuss new minimally invasive techniques that may become important in future clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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171. Accelerations Recorded by Simple Inertial Measurement Units with Low Sampling Frequency Can Differentiate between Individuals with and without Knee Osteoarthritis: Implications for Remote Health Care.
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Ghaffari, Arash, Rasmussen, John, Kold, Søren, Lauritsen, Rikke Emilie Kildahl, Kappel, Andreas, and Rahbek, Ole
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KNEE osteoarthritis , *UNITS of measurement , *MEDICAL care , *KNEE , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *FOURIER transforms , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of acceleration - Abstract
Determining the presence and severity of knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a valuable application of inertial measurement units (IMUs) in the remote monitoring of patients. This study aimed to employ the Fourier representation of IMU signals to differentiate between individuals with and without knee OA. We included 27 patients with unilateral knee osteoarthritis (15 females) and 18 healthy controls (11 females). Gait acceleration signals were recorded during overground walking. We obtained the frequency features of the signals using the Fourier transform. The logistic LASSO regression was employed on the frequency domain features as well as the participant's age, sex, and BMI to distinguish between the acceleration data from individuals with and without knee OA. The model's accuracy was estimated by 10-fold cross-validation. The frequency contents of the signals were different between the two groups. The average accuracy of the classification model using the frequency features was 0.91 ± 0.01. The distribution of the selected features in the final model differed between patients with different severity of knee OA. In this study, we demonstrated that using logistic LASSO regression on the Fourier representation of acceleration signals can accurately determine the presence of knee OA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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172. Birthweight correlates to pubo-femoral distances and a angles in hip ultrasound of newborns at 6 weeks of age: a retrospective cohort study.
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TIRTA, Maria, HELLFRITZSCH, Michel Bach, MAIMBURG, Rikke Damkjær, HENRIKSEN, Mads, LAPITSKAYA, Natallia, KOLD, Søren, MØLLER-MADSEN, Bjarne, RAHBEK, Ole, and HUSUM, Hans-Christen
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RESEARCH , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PUBIC bone , *HIP joint , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *ACQUISITION of data , *CONGENITAL hip dislocation , *HIP joint dislocation , *SEX distribution , *BIRTH weight , *MEDICAL records , *RESEARCH funding , *FEMUR , *STATISTICAL correlation , *DYSPLASIA , *LONGITUDINAL method , *DISEASE risk factors , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background and purpose -- There is inconsistency in the literature regarding the relationship between increased birthweight and risk of developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH). We aimed to investigate the correlation between birthweight and pubo-femoral distance (PFD), as well as Graf's α angle in newborns undergoing hip ultrasound examination at 6 weeks of age. Patients and methods -- Basic newborn characteristics and ultrasound measurements were retrospectively collected during a 1-year study period. We excluded multiple births, newborns born at less than 37 gestational weeks, and incomplete information. Simple and multiple linear regression analyses were performed to evaluate the correlation of birthweight and PFD, and, second, birthweight and α angles including a stratified regression analysis investigating the potential effect modification of sex. Results -- 707 newborns (1,414 hips) were included. Mean birthweight was significantly higher for male new-borns (P < 0.001). Increased birthweight was positively correlated to PFD values (crude coefficient 0.21, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.10-0.32) and the correlation was still present after adjusting for sex, family history, and breech presentation (adjusted coefficient 0.18, CI 0.07-0.29). The stratified α angle model for the males was significant for both the crude coefficient (-0.73, CI -1.28 to -0.19) and the adjusted (-0.59, CI -1.15 to -0.03), and also for the females (crude coefficient -1.14, CI -1.98 to -0.31 and adjusted coefficient -1.15, CI -1.99 to -0.31). Conclusion -- We found that increased birthweight positively correlated to PFD, and negatively correlated to α angle, but this was not of clinical significance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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173. The role of thermography in assessment of wounds. A scoping review.
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Fridberg, Marie, Bafor, Anirejuoritse, Iobst, Christopher A., Laugesen, Britt, Jepsen, Jette Frost, Rahbek, Ole, and Kold, Søren
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INFRARED cameras , *SURGICAL site infections , *SURGICAL site , *DIABETIC foot , *THERMOGRAPHY , *MEDICAL thermography - Abstract
• With this scoping review, we aim to map and summarize what has been reported on thermography used to assess signs of inflammation in humans and animals with surgical or traumatic wounds. • A pattern seen from mapping the available evidence is that a healing wound will, over time, normalize in temperature and if infection occurs in a wound during healing, the temperature will rise above the "inflammation level." In other words, sudden temperature elevation in a wound should raise concerns of infection. This trend aligns with the general understanding of when to suspect infection clinically, but from the available literature, it is still not possible to set a specific temperature threshold value to differentiate between inflammation and infection. • Across diverse and explorative sources, we found a trend that wounds are warmer than non-injured skin and that this temperature rise is detectable with different modern thermographic cameras under pragmatic conditions (equal to bedside examination). This finding aligns with previously published literature where thermography has been used to assess burn wounds, diabetic foot complications and other inflammatory conditions without wounds. • By this review the available literature was mapped and grouped, and trends was revealed but since the reporting is inconsistent and the literature is diverse, firm evidence for introduction thermography for infection surveillance of surgical wounds is missing. • This scoping review revealed that modern thermographic cameras might be a promising tool for the clinician to quickly quantify the temperature pattern of surgical wounds to distinguish between inflammation and infection. Assessment of wounds based on visual appearance has poor inter- and intra-rater reliability and it is difficult to differentiate between inflammation and infection. Thermography is a user-friendly quantitative image technique that collects the skin surface temperature pattern of the wound area and immediately visualizes the temperatures as a rainbow coloured diagram. The aim of this scoping review is to map and summarize the existing evidence on how thermography has been used to assess signs of inflammation in humans and animals with surgical or traumatic wounds. The method follows the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology. The databases searched were PubMed, Embase, CINAHL and Cochrane Library. 3798 sources were identified, 2666 were screened on title and abstract, 99 on full text and 19 studies were included for review. We found that the literature is diverse and originates from a variety of scientific fields. Thermography has been used to detect and predict inflammation and infection in surgical wounds. Grading systems based on the visual appearance correlate to temperature patterns detected with thermography. The general tendency is that thermography detects the temperature in a wound with inflammation to be warmer than a reference area or the same skin area before surgery. In a surgical wound the temperature is elevated 1–2 weeks after surgery due to natural physiological inflammation that induces healing, after 2 weeks the temperature of the wound area slowly and steady decreases to baseline over 1–3 months. If a secondary temperature peak happens during the healing phase of a surgical wound, it is likely that infection has occurred. Modern handheld thermographic cameras might be a promising tool for the clinician to quickly quantify the temperature pattern of surgical wounds to distinguish between inflammation and infection. However, firm evidence supporting infection thermography surveillance of surgical wounds as a technique is missing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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174. Proteomic Profiling Identifies Specific Leukemic Stem Cell-Associated Protein Expression Patterns in Pediatric AML Patients.
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Petersen, Marianne Agerlund, Rosenberg, Carina Agerbo, Bill, Marie, Enemark, Marie Beck, Rahbek, Ole, Roug, Anne Stidsholt, Hasle, Henrik, Honoré, Bent, and Ludvigsen, Maja
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BIOCHEMISTRY , *PHENOMENOLOGICAL biology , *PEDIATRICS , *CELL receptors , *PROTEOMICS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *GENE expression profiling , *STEM cells , *MASS spectrometry , *HEMATOPOIETIC stem cells , *CALCIUM-binding proteins - Abstract
Simple Summary: Acute myeloid leukemia is an aggressive cancer in children and novel therapeutic tools are warranted to improve outcomes and reduce late effects in these patients. In this study, we isolate and explore the protein profiles of leukemic stem cells and normal hematopoietic stem cells from hematologically healthy children. Differences in protein profiles between leukemic and normal hematopoietic stem cells were identified. These results provide an insight into the disrupted biological pathways in childhood acute myeloid leukemia. Moreover, differences in protein profiles may serve as potential targets for future therapies specifically aiming at the disease-propagating leukemic stem cells while omitting the normal hematopoietic stem cells. Novel therapeutic tools are warranted to improve outcomes for children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Differences in the proteome of leukemic blasts and stem cells (AML-SCs) in AML compared with normal hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) may facilitate the identification of potential targets for future treatment strategies. In this explorative study, we used mass spectrometry to compare the proteome of AML-SCs and CLEC12A+ blasts from five pediatric AML patients with HSCs and hematopoietic progenitor cells from hematologically healthy, age-matched controls. A total of 456 shared proteins were identified in both leukemic and control samples. Varying protein expression profiles were observed in AML-SCs and leukemic blasts, none having any overall resemblance to healthy counterpart cell populations. Thirty-four proteins were differentially expressed between AML-SCs and HSCs, including the upregulation of HSPE1, SRSF1, and NUP210, and the enrichment of proteins suggestive of protein synthesis perturbations through the downregulation of EIF2 signaling was found. Among others, NUP210 and calreticulin were upregulated in CLEC12A+ blasts compared with HSCs. In conclusion, the observed differences in protein expression between pediatric patients with AML and pediatric controls, in particular when comparing stem cell subsets, encourages the extended exploration of leukemia and AML-SC-specific biomarkers of potential relevance in the development of future therapeutic options in pediatric AML. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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175. Immunophenotypically defined stem cell subsets in paediatric AML are highly heterogeneous and demonstrate differences in BCL‐2 expression by cytogenetic subgroups.
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Petersen, Marianne A., Rosenberg, Carina A., Brøndum, Rasmus F., Aggerholm, Anni, Kjeldsen, Eigil, Rahbek, Ole, Ludvigsen, Maja, Hasle, Henrik, Roug, Anne S., and Bill, Marie
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STEM cells , *HEMATOPOIETIC stem cells , *ACUTE myeloid leukemia , *CHILD patients , *BONE marrow cells - Abstract
In adult acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), immunophenotypic differences enable discrimination of leukaemic stem cells (LSCs) from healthy haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). However, immunophenotypic stem cell characteristics are less explored in paediatric AML. Employing a 15‐colour flow cytometry assay, we analysed the expression of eight aberrant surface markers together with BCL‐2 on CD34+CD38− bone marrow stem cells from 38 paediatric AML patients and seven non‐leukaemic, age‐matched controls. Furthermore, clonality was investigated by genetic analyses of sorted immunophenotypically abnormal stem cells from six patients. A total of 50 aberrant marker positive (non‐HSC‐like) subsets with 41 different immunophenotypic profiles were detected. CD123, CLEC12A, and IL1RAP were the most frequently expressed markers. IL1RAP, CD93, and CD25 expression were not restricted to stem cells harbouring leukaemia‐associated mutations. Differential BCL‐2 expression was found among defined cytogenetic subgroups. Interestingly, only immunophenotypically abnormal non‐HSC‐like subsets demonstrated BCL‐2 overexpression. Collectively, we observed pronounced immunophenotypic heterogeneity within the stem cell compartment of paediatric AML patients. Additionally, certain aberrant markers used in adults seemed to be ineligible for detection of leukaemia‐representing stem cells in paediatric patients implying that inference from adult studies must be done with caution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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176. Digital Communication Between Patients and Health Care Professionals Across Disciplines and Sectors After Hospital Discharge: Facilitators, Barriers, and Effects.
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Jensen, Lili Worre Høpfner, Dinesen, Birthe, Kold, Søren, and Rahbek, Ole
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DIGITAL communications , *MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL care , *DISEASE risk factors , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge - Abstract
Background: Over the past decade, hospital admissions for patients undergoing orthopedic surgery have been shortened, and the time for informing and educating patients prior to discharge has been compromised. The transition of care from hospital to home poses a substantial risk of adverse events. Patients have difficulty remembering information and struggle to assess the severity of symptoms after discharge, leading to unplanned telephone contacts and clinic visits. These inquiries are frequent and pose a substantial burden on the health care system and patients. The COVID-19 pandemic showed an emerging need to implement new communication technologies. Asynchronous digital communication (DC) may provide easy access to health care and seamless communication across sectors. Objective: This study aimed to investigate how DC can facilitate easy communication between patients and health care professionals (HCPs) across sectors and the effects of DC on patient-initiated telephone contacts after discharge. Methods: The overall theoretical approach was inspired by Continuity of Care and the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research. Substudy I was a scoping review on DC between patients and HCPs after hospital discharge. Substudy II explored DC in an orthopedic surgery setting and through a triangulation of qualitative data collection techniques. Substudy III investigated the effect of DC on patient-initiated telephone contacts after discharge. Results: Preliminary findings from substudy I show that DC is increasingly used to support patient-provider communication after discharge. In substudy II, preliminary findings show that DC is feasible in a real-life setting, providing patients with easy access to HCPs, who accept and adapt DC to existing cross-sectoral workflows. However, barriers exist related to the technological integration between systems and individuals' hesitation to use DC. In substudy III, DC is to be tested in a randomized controlled trial. Conclusions: This study generates new knowledge of asynchronous DC that may guide future implementations across the health care system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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177. An assessment of the inter-rater and intra-rater reliability of the modified Gordon pin infection classification system.
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Bafor A, Skals RG, Shen M, Iobst CA, Rahbek O, Kold S, and Fridberg M
- Abstract
Objectives: A grading system deployed for continuous at-home monitoring of pin sites would potentially increase the chances of early detection of pin-site infections and the commencement of early treatment. The first five grades of the Modified Gordon Pin Site Classification Scheme (MGS) meet the criteria for a visual-only, digital assessment-based grading system. The aim of this study was to assess the inter- and intra-rater reliability of the first five grades of the MGS from digital images., Methods: We graded 1082 pin sites from 572 digital photographs of patients who underwent external fixator treatment for various conditions using the first five grades of the MGS classification scheme. Percent agreement and kappa values were calculated to determine the inter- and intra-rater agreement. Results were also grouped into two categories: "good" consisting of MGS grades 0-2 and "bad" made up of grades 3 and 4 for sensitivity analysis. We also analyzed reliability based on color only using MGS grades 0 and 2., Results: A total of 843 of the 1082 pin sites were scored by all raters. There was moderate reliability between raters with a Fleiss kappa value of 0.48 [CI 0.45, 0.51]. The reliability remained moderate based on grouping into "good' versus "bad" and based on color with Fleiss kappa values of 0.48 [CI 0.45, 0.52] and 0.45 [CI 0.42, 0.49], respectively. Intra-rater reliability demonstrated substantial agreement with kappa values of 0.63., Conclusion: Scoring pin sites from digital images with the MGS demonstrated only moderate inter-rater reliability. Modifying the use of digital photos is needed for at-home monitoring of pin sites., Competing Interests: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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178. Can pin-site inflammation be detected with thermographic imaging? A cross-sectional study from the USA and Denmark of patients treated with external fixators.
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Fridberg M, Rahbek O, Husum HC, Anirejuoritse B, Duch K, Iobst C, and Kold S
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Denmark, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Adult, United States, Aged, Inflammation diagnosis, Bone Nails adverse effects, Surgical Wound Infection diagnosis, Adolescent, Young Adult, Thermography methods, External Fixators adverse effects
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Patients with external fixators are at risk of pin-site infection. A tool for objective monitoring of pin sites for evolving signs of infection is warranted. We aimed to investigate the temperature (MaxTp) difference between clean and visually inflamed pin sites using thermography and to establish the optimal cut-off value of MaxTp using thermography as a screening tool for inflammation detection., Methods: This was a cross-sectional study performed in the USA and Denmark of patients with circular external fixators. Pin sites were visually judged by a surgeon or a nurse as clean or as showing signs of inflammation. The MaxTp was obtained at the pin site by thermographic imaging using an infrared camera (FLIR T540)., Results: We included 1,970 pin sites from 83 patients. The mean MaxTp for clean pin sites (n = 1,739) was 33.1°C (95% confidence interval [CI] 32.8-33.4) and the mean MaxTp for visual inflamed pin sites (n = 231) was 34.0°C (CI 33.6-34.3). The mean difference, when adjusted for repeated observations of patients and pin sites, was statistically significant with a difference of 0.9°C (CI 0.7-1.1) (P < 0.001). The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for MaxTp as a screening tool to detect visual signs of inflammation was 0.71 (CI 0.65-0.76). The empirically optimal cut-off value was 34.1°C with a sensitivity of 65%, a specificity of 72%, a positive predictive value of 23%, and a negative predictive value of 94%., Conclusion: We found a statistically significant difference in mean temperature between pin sites with and without visual signs of inflammation. Thermography could be a promising tool for future point of care technology for monitoring inflammation around pin sites.
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- 2024
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179. Multivariable model for gait pattern differentiation in elderly patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis: A wearable sensor approach.
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Ghaffari A, Clasen PD, Boel RV, Kappel A, Jakobsen T, Rasmussen J, Kold S, and Rahbek O
- Abstract
Background: Hip and knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients demonstrate distinct gait patterns, yet detecting subtle abnormalities with wearable sensors remains uncertain. This study aimed to assess a predictive model's efficacy in distinguishing between hip and knee OA gait patterns using accelerometer data., Method: Participants with hip or knee OA underwent overground walking assessments, recording lower limb accelerations for subsequent time and frequency domain analyses. Logistic regression with regularization identified associations between frequency domain features of acceleration signals and OA, and k-nearest neighbor classification distinguished knee and hip OA based on selected acceleration signal features., Findings: We included 57 knee OA patients (30 females, median age 68 [range 49-89], median BMI 29.7 [range 21.0-45.9]) and 42 hip OA patients (19 females, median age 70 [range 47-89], median BMI 28.3 [range 20.4-37.2]). No significant difference could be found in the time domain's averaged shape of acceleration signals. However, in the frequency domain, five selected features showed a diagnostic ability to differentiate between knee and hip OA. Using these features, a model achieved a 77 % accuracy in classifying gait cycles into hip or knee OA groups, with average precision, recall, and F1 score of 77 %, 76 %, and 78 %, respectively., Interpretation: The study demonstrates the effectiveness of wearable sensors in differentiating gait patterns between individuals with hip and knee OA, specifically in the frequency domain. The results highlights the promising potential of wearable sensors and advanced signal processing techniques for objective assessment of OA in clinical settings., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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180. A surface registration-based approach for assessment of 3D angles in guided growth interventions in the growing femur.
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Gholinezhad S, Rasmussen J, Halloum A, Kold S, and Rahbek O
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Purpose: Postoperative assessment of surgical interventions for correcting femoral rotational deformities necessitates a comparative analysis of femoral rotation pre- and post-surgery. While 2D assessment methods are commonly employed, ongoing debate surrounds their accuracy and reliability. To address the limitations associated with 2D analysis, we introduced and validated a 3D model-based analysis method for quantifying the angular and rotational impact of corrective rotational osteotomy in the growing femur., Methods: The method is based on surface registration of the pre- and post-intervention 3D femoral models. To this end, 3D triangulated surface models were generated using CT images for the right femurs of 11 skeletally immature pigs, each scanned at two distinct time points with a 12-week interval between scans. In our validation procedures, femoral corrective rotational osteotomy of the post-12-week femur was simulated at varying angles of 5, 10, 15 and 20 degrees in three dimensions. Subsequently, a surface 3D/3D registration-based approach was applied to determine the 3D femoral angulation and rotation between the two models to assess the method's detection accuracy of the predefined twist angles as ground truth references., Results: The results document the precision and accuracy of the registration-based method in evaluating rotation angles. Consistently high accuracy was observed across all angles, with an accuracy rate of 92.97% and a coefficient of variance of 8.14%., Conclusion: This study has showcased the potential for improving post-operative assessments with significant implications for experimental studies evaluating the effects of correcting rotational deformities in the growing femur., Level of Evidence: Not applicable., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy.)
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- 2024
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181. Staples, tension-band plates, and percutaneous epiphysiodesis screws used for leg-length discrepancy treatment: a systematic review and proportional meta-analysis.
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Tirta M, Hjorth MH, Jepsen JF, Kold S, and Rahbek O
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- Humans, Child, Treatment Outcome, Sutures, Surgical Stapling methods, Surgical Stapling adverse effects, Surgical Stapling instrumentation, Leg Length Inequality surgery, Bone Plates, Bone Screws, Epiphyses surgery
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Background and Purpose: The primary aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the success rate of 3 different epiphysiodesis techniques with implant usage for the treatment of leg-length discrepancy (LLD) in the pediatric population. The secondary aim was to address effectiveness (final LLD) and the reported complications of staples, tension-band plates (TBP), and percutaneous epiphysiodesis screws (PETS)., Methods: In this systematic review we searched MEDLINE (PubMed), Embase, Cochrane Library, Web of Science and Scopus for studies on skeletally immature patients with LLD treated with epiphysiodesis with an implant. The extracted outcome categories were effectiveness of epiphysiodesis (LLD measurements pre-/postoperatively, successful/unsuccessful) and complications that were graded on severity., Results: 44 studies (2,184 patients) were included. 455 underwent epiphysiodesis with PETS, 578 patients with TBP, and 1,048 with staples. Successful epiphysiodesis was reported in 76% (95% confidence interval [CI] 61-89) with PETS (9 studies), 67% (CI 54-79) with TBP (10 studies), and 51% (CI 28-65) with Blount staples (8 studies). From pooled analysis, the severe complications rate was 7% for PETS, 17% for TBP, and 16% for Blount staples. Angular deformity was reported in 4% after PETS, 10% after TBP, and 17% after Blount staples., Conclusion: Our results showed that epiphysiodesis with PETS implants was the most successful technique. PETS had a higher success rate, fewer severe complications, and a lower proportion with angular deformity.
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- 2024
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182. Is casting of displaced paediatric distal forearm fractures non-inferior to reduction under general anaesthesia? Study protocol for a pragmatic, randomized, controlled non-inferiority multicentre trial (the casting trial).
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Abildgaard KR, Buxbom P, Rahbek O, Gottliebsen M, Gundtoft PH, Viberg B, and Brorson S
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- Humans, Child, Child, Preschool, Treatment Outcome, Ulna Fractures surgery, Ulna Fractures therapy, Equivalence Trials as Topic, Female, Male, Time Factors, Fracture Healing, Fracture Fixation adverse effects, Fracture Fixation methods, Age Factors, Forearm Injuries surgery, Forearm Injuries therapy, Recovery of Function, Wrist Fractures, Radius Fractures surgery, Radius Fractures therapy, Casts, Surgical, Anesthesia, General, Pragmatic Clinical Trials as Topic, Multicenter Studies as Topic
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Background: Treatment of displaced distal forearm fractures in children has traditionally been closed reduction and pin fixation, although they might heal and remodel without surgery with no functional impairment. No randomized controlled trials have been published comparing the patient-reported functional outcome following non-surgical or surgical treatment of displaced paediatric distal forearm fractures., Methods: A multicentre non-inferiority randomized controlled trial. Children aged 4-10 years with a displaced distal forearm fracture will be offered inclusion, if the on-duty orthopaedic surgeon finds indication for surgical intervention. They will be allocated equally to non-surgical treatment (intervention) or surgical treatment of surgeon's choice (comparator). Follow-up will be 4 weeks and 3, 6, and 12 months. The primary outcome is the between-group difference in 12 months QuickDASH score. We will need a sample of 40 patients to show a 15-point difference with 80% power., Discussion: The results of this trial may change our understanding of the healing potential of paediatric distal forearm fractures. If non-inferiority of non-surgical treatment is shown, the results may contribute to a reduction in future surgeries on children, who in turn can be treated without the risks and psychological burdens associated with surgery., Trial Registration: www., Clinicaltrials: gov (ID: NCT05736068). Date of registry: 17 February 2023., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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183. Electrical impedance detects early stages of bone healing: An in vivo explanatory study of tibial fractures in rabbits.
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Frost MW, Tirta M, Rahbek O, Rytoft LA, Ding M, Shen M, Duch K, and Kold S
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Purpose: Healing after bone fracture is assessed by clinical examination and frequent radiographs, which expose patients to radiation and lack standardisation. This study aimed to explore electrical impedance patterns during bone healing using electrical impedance spectroscopy in 18 rabbits subjected to tibial fracture stabilised with an external fixator., Methods: Impedance was measured daily across the fracture site at a frequency range of 5 Hz to 1 MHz. Biweekly radiographs were analysed using modified anterior-posterior (AP) radiographic union score of the tibia (RUST). The animals were divided into three groups with different follow-up times: 1, 3 and 6 weeks for micro-computer tomography and mechanical testing., Results: A decreasing trend in impedance was observed over time for all rabbits at lower frequencies. Impedance closest to 5 Hz showed a statistically significant decrease over time, with greatest decrease occurring during the first 7 postoperative days. At 5 Hz, a statistically significant correlation was found between impedance and the modified AP RUST score and between impedance and bone volume fraction., Conclusions: This study showed that the electrical impedance can be measured in vivo at a distance from the fracture site with a consistent change in impedance over time and revealed significant correlation between increasing radiographic union score and decreasing impedance., Level of Evidence: Not applicable., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy.)
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- 2024
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184. Change in treatment preferences in pediatric diaphyseal forearm fractures: a Danish nationwide register study of 36,244 fractures between 1997 and 2016.
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Rahbek O, Kold S, and Husum HC
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- Humans, Denmark epidemiology, Child, Male, Female, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Diaphyses injuries, Fracture Fixation methods, Infant, Practice Patterns, Physicians' statistics & numerical data, Registries, Ulna Fractures surgery, Ulna Fractures therapy, Radius Fractures therapy
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- 2024
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185. Team-based digital communication reduced patient-initiated phone calls to the hospital and improved patient satisfaction after orthopedic surgery: a randomized controlled trial in 70 patients.
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Høpfner Jensen LW, Kold S, Dinesen B, Husum HC, Skals RG, Eiskjær SP, Elsøe R, and Rahbek O
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Telephone, Adult, Patient Care Team, Communication, Patient Satisfaction, Orthopedic Procedures methods, Patient Discharge, Continuity of Patient Care
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Background and Purpose: Post-discharge inquiries to the hospital are predominantly conducted through phone calls. The rigid timing of these calls is inconvenient for patients and disrupts the workflows of healthcare professionals. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of a team-based digital communication intervention (eDialogue) facilitated through a messenger-like commercial solution on patient-initiated phone calls to the hospital after discharge. Secondarily, we investigated other patient-initiated contacts, patients' perception of continuity of care, and their perception of feeling safe and satisfied after hospital discharge., Methods: On the day of discharge, 70 surgically treated orthopedic patients were randomized to the intervention group with access to eDialogue (n = 35) or the control group with standard communication pathways by phone call (n = 35) for the following 8 weeks. Through eDialogue, the intervention group had access to team-based asynchronous digital communication in text and photos with healthcare professionals across disciplines and sectors. Inclusion criteria were discharge to own home and receipt of rehabilitation services from both hospital and primary care after discharge., Results: We found a significant reduction in the mean number of patient-initiated phone calls to the hospital from 2.3 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.4-4.1) in the control group to 0.5 (CI 0.3-1.0) in the intervention group (P = 0.004). Across groups, patients reported similar perceptions of continuity of care; however, the participants in the intervention group expressed significantly improved perceptions of, and satisfaction with, access to healthcare after discharge., Conclusion: Access to eDialogue reduced patient-initiated phone calls to the hospital, enhanced patient satisfaction with healthcare accessibility, and did not compromise patients' perception of continuity of care after discharge compared with standard communication pathways.
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- 2024
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186. An Innovative Plate Concept for Rotational Guided Growth: A Porcine Pilot Study.
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Abood AA, Rölfing JD, Halloum A, Ringgaard S, Byskov JS, Kold S, and Rahbek O
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Background Rotational deformities in children are currently treated with an osteotomy, acute de-rotation, and surgical fixation. Meanwhile, guided growth is now the gold standard in pediatric coronal deformity correction. This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of a novel implant intended for rotational guided growth (RotOs Plate) in a large porcine animal model. Methodology A submuscular plate was inserted on the medial and lateral aspect of the distal femoral physis of the left femur in 6 pigs. Each plate was anchored with a screw in the metaphysis and epiphysis respectively. The plates were expected to rotate the femur externally. The right femur acted as a control in a paired design. The animals were housed for 12 weeks after surgery. MRI scanning of both femora was performed before euthanasia after 12 weeks. Rotation was determined as the difference in the femoral version on MRI between the operated and non-operated femur after 12 weeks. Results External rotation in all operated femurs was observed. The mean difference in the femoral version on MRI between operated and non-operated femurs was 12.5° (range 9°-16°). No significant changes in axial growth were detected. Conclusions This study shows encouraging results regarding rotational guided growth, which may replace current invasive surgical treatment options for malrotation in children. However, further studies addressing potential secondary deformities are paramount and should be carried out., Competing Interests: RotOs Plate TM is patented by the Danish Region of Northern Jutland/Region Nord Denmark (public Danish region) and the inventor of the plate design and concept is Ahmed A. Abood who is an author of this paper., (Copyright © 2024, Abood et al.)
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- 2024
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187. Patient Perspectives on Communication Pathways After Orthopedic Surgery and Discharge and Evaluation of Team-Based Digital Communication: Qualitative Exploratory Study.
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Jensen LWH, Rahbek O, Lauritsen REK, Kold S, and Dinesen B
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- Humans, Qualitative Research, Communication, Tertiary Care Centers, Patient Discharge, Orthopedic Procedures
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Background: The transition from hospital to home after orthopedic surgery requires smooth communication and coordination between patients and their team of care to avoid fragmented care pathways. Digital communication is increasingly being used to facilitate easy and accessible asynchronous communication between patients and health care professionals across settings. A team-based approach to digital communication may provide optimized quality of care in the postoperative period following orthopedic surgery and hospital discharge., Objective: This study was divided into two phases that aimed to (1) explore the perspectives of patients undergoing orthopedic surgery on current communication pathways at a tertiary hospital in Denmark and (2) test and explore patients' experiences and use of team-based digital communication following hospital discharge (eDialogue)., Methods: A triangulation of qualitative data collection techniques was applied: document analysis, participant observations (n=16 hours), semistructured interviews with patients before (n=31) and after (n=24) their access to eDialogue, and exploration of use data., Results: Findings show that patients experience difficult communication pathways after hospital discharge and a lack of information due to inadequate coordination of care. eDialogue was used by 84% (26/31) of the patients, and they suggested that it provided a sense of security, coherence, and proximity in the aftercare rearranging communication pathways for the better. Specific drivers and barriers to use were identified, and these call for further exploration of eDialogue., Conclusions: In conclusion, patients evaluated eDialogue positively and suggested that it could support them after returning home following orthopedic surgery., (©Lili Worre Høpfner Jensen, Ole Rahbek, Rikke Emilie Kildahl Lauritsen, Søren Kold, Birthe Dinesen. Originally published in JMIR Human Factors (https://humanfactors.jmir.org), 29.03.2024.)
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- 2024
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188. Health Care Professionals' Perspectives Before and After Use of eDialogue for Team-Based Digital Communication Across Settings: Qualitative Study.
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Jensen LWH, Rahbek O, Lauritsen REK, Kold S, and Dinesen B
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- Humans, Qualitative Research, Focus Groups, Document Analysis, Communication, Health Personnel
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Background: Orthopedic surgical treatment is a transversal task that requires the active involvement of patients, relatives, and health care professionals (HCPs) across various settings. However, after hospital discharge, communication is challenged and undertaken primarily by phone. New digital communication solutions have the potential to create a space for seamless and patient-centered dialogue across discipline and sector boundaries. When evaluating new communication solutions, knowledge about HCPs' needs and perspectives of use must be explored, as it is they who are responsible for implementing changes in practice., Objective: This study aimed to (1) investigate HCPs' perceptions of current communication pathways (phase 1) and (2) explore their experiences of using a simple messenger-like solution (eDialogue) for team-based digital communication across settings (phase 2)., Methods: We used a triangulation of qualitative data collection techniques, including document analysis, observations, focus groups, and individual interviews of HCPs before (n=28) and after (n=12) their use of eDialogue. Data collection and analysis were inspired by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) to specifically understand facilitators and barriers to implementation as perceived by HCPs., Results: HCPs perceive current communication pathways as insufficient for both patients and themselves. Phone calls are disruptive, and there is a lack of direct communication modalities when communication crosses sector boundaries. HCPs experienced the use of eDialogue as a quick and easy way for timely interdisciplinary interaction with patients and other HCPs across settings; however, concerns were raised about time consumption., Conclusions: eDialogue can provide needed support for interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral patient-centered communication. However, future studies of this solution should address its impact and the use of resources., (©Lili Worre Høpfner Jensen, Ole Rahbek, Rikke Emilie Kildahl Lauritsen, Søren Kold, Birthe Dinesen. Originally published in JMIR Human Factors (https://humanfactors.jmir.org), 08.03.2024.)
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- 2024
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189. Neuropathic pain after orthopaedic surgery with continuous peripheral nerve block.
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Sperling PK, Launa N, Ghaffari A, Rømer H, Sørensen MPB, Rahbek O, Kold S, and Bisgaard J
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- Humans, Pain, Postoperative etiology, Peripheral Nerves, Orthopedics, Orthopedic Procedures adverse effects, Neuralgia etiology
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Introduction: Continuous peripheral nerve blocks (cPNBs) have shown favourable post-operative pain control results but may be associated with a risk for long-term neurological complications. This study sought to examine factors associated with persistent post-operative pain and potential neuropathy after orthopaedic lower-limb surgery with the use of post-operative cPNB., Methods: Patients who underwent lower limb orthopaedic procedures with cPNBs between November 2021 to May 2022 were included. Patient demographics and perioperative data were noted. At discharge, patients completed the PainDetect (PD) questionnaire and were followed up six months after discharge., Results: Seventy-seven patients with a total of 171 catheters completed the follow up. The median time to follow-up was 214 days after catheter removal, and 18 patients (23%) had a PD score ≥ 13. Univariate analysis showed that multiple variables were associated with a PD score ≥ 13 at the six-month follow-up. Multiple logistic regression showed that a high PD score at discharge, high BMI and longer duration of cPNBs were associated with higher risk of having a PD score ≥ 13 at the six-month follow-up., Conclusion: Several factors were associated with a higher risk of having possible neuropathy after six months. BMI, duration of catheter and PD score at discharge were correlated with risk of possible neuropathic pain., Funding: None., Trial Registration: The study was a quality control project and therefore did not require registration under Danish law., (Published under Open Access CC-BY-NC-BD 4.0. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.)
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- 2024
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190. Are percutaneous epiphysiodesis and Phemister technique effective in the treatment of leg-length discrepancy? A systematic review.
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Tirta M, Hjorth MH, Jepsen JF, Rahbek O, and Kold S
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Epiphysiodesis is considered the preferred treatment for children predicted to have leg length discrepancies (LLDs) 2-5 cm at maturity. The aim of this study was to systematically review the existing literature on the effectiveness of permanent epiphysiodesis for LLD treatment, and secondarily to address the reported complications of permanent epiphysiodesis techniques. This systematic review was performed according to PRISMA guidelines. We searched MEDLINE (PubMed), Embase, Cochrane Library, Web of Science and Scopus for studies on skeletally immature patients with LLD treated with permanent epiphysiodesis. The extracted outcome categories were effectiveness of epiphysiodesis (LLD measurements pre/post-operatively, successful/unsuccessful), physeal fusion/arrest, and complications that were graded on severity. Forty-nine studies (3051 patients) were included, 1550 underwent Phemister/modified Phemister epiphysiodesis and 1501 percutaneous epiphysiodesis (PE). Total successful permanent epiphysiodesis surgeries (16 studies) were 73.7% (516/700). Only 13 out of 23 studies had a mean final LLD of less than 1.5 cm. In total, 17.5% (513/2936) of complications were reported. 57 angular deformities were reported (1.9%). Phemister technique had higher percentage of complications (39%) than PE (19.1%) in total, but when failure to achieve adequate reduction in LLD was not included, complication rates for both were close to 14%. However, severe complications were 10.2% for Phemister group and 5.1% for PE. The high complication rates and the relative low success rate call for optimization of the timing and the applied techniques when treating LLD with permanent epiphysiodesis. Phemister technique was found to have higher percentage of severe complications than PE. Registration: PROSPERO (CRD42023435177)., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
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- 2024
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191. Correction of rotational deformities in long bones using guided growth: a scoping review.
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Halloum A, Kold S, Rölfing JD, Abood AA, and Rahbek O
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Purpose: The objective of this scoping review was to describe the extent and type of evidence of using guided growth to correct rotational deformities of long bones in children., Methods: This scoping review was conducted in accordance with the JBI methodology for scoping reviews. All published and unpublished studies investigating surgical methods using guided growth to perform gradual rotation of long bones were included., Results: Fourteen studies were included: one review, three clinical studies, and ten preclinical studies. In the three clinical studies, three different surgical methods were used on 21 children. Some degree of rotation was achieved in all but two children. Adverse effects reported included limb length discrepancy (LLD), knee stiffness and rebound of rotation after removal of tethers. Of the ten preclinical studies, two were ex vivo and eight were in vivo. Rotation was achieved in all preclinical studies. Adverse effects reported included implant extrusions, LLD, articular deformities, joint stiffness and rebound of rotation after removal of tethers. Two of the studies reported on histological changes., Conclusions: All studies conclude that guided growth is a potential treatment for rotational deformities of long bones. There is great variation in animal models and surgical methods used and in reported adverse effects. More research is needed to shed light on the best surgical guided growth method, its effectiveness as well as the involved risks and complications. Based on current evidence the procedure is still to be considered experimental., Level of Evidence: 4.
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- 2024
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192. The Danish child and parent Gait Outcomes Assessment List questionnaires were reliable and valid for cerebral palsy.
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Nordbye-Nielsen K, Maribo T, Rahbek O, Narayanan U, and Møller-Madsen B
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- Child, Male, Humans, Female, Reproducibility of Results, Gait, Surveys and Questionnaires, Parents, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Denmark, Cerebral Palsy diagnosis
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Aim: We investigated the reliability and validity of the Danish child and parent versions of the Gait Outcomes Assessment List (GOAL) questionnaires for ambulatory children with cerebral palsy (CP)., Methods: Translation and cultural adaptations were performed and content validity evaluated. Participants were enrolled between 2016 and 2018 from Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark. Children and parents completed the GOAL questionnaires twice for test-retest reliability. Discriminative validity was evaluated by comparing the child and parent GOAL scores between children with Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) levels I and II. The concurrent validity of the GOAL questionnaires were investigated by comparing them with Challenge-20, which assesses motor skills in children with CP., Results: We studied 59 children (57% boys) with CP and GMFCS I-II at a mean age of 10.6 years. Test-retest intra-class correlations were excellent for the children (0.91, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.83-0.96) and good for the parents (0.83, 95% CI 0.67-0.91). GOAL scores decreased with increasing GMFCS (p < 0.05). Both versions correlated well. The mean children's scores were significantly (6.2/100) higher than the parents' (p < 0.001). The GOAL scores correlated positively with Challenge-20., Conclusion: The Danish GOAL child and parent questionnaires demonstrated good reliability and content and discriminative and concurrent validity., (© 2023 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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193. Pubofemoral distances correlate to acetabular morphology and sonological instability in screening for hip dysplasia.
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Husum HC, Hellfritzsch MB, Maimburg RD, Møller-Madsen B, Henriksen M, Lapitskaya N, Kold S, and Rahbek O
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Aims: The present study seeks to investigate the correlation of pubofemoral distances (PFD) to α angles, and hip displaceability status, defined as femoral head coverage (FHC) or FHC during manual provocation of the newborn hip < 50%., Methods: We retrospectively included all newborns referred for ultrasound screening at our institution based on primary risk factor, clinical, and PFD screening. α angles, PFD, FHC, and FHC at follow-up ultrasound for referred newborns were measured and compared using scatter plots, linear regression, paired t -test, and box-plots., Results: We included 2,735 newborns, of whom 754 received a follow-up hip ultrasound within six weeks of age. After exclusion, 1,500 hips were included for analysis. Sex distribution was 372 male and 380 female, and the mean age at examination was 36.6 days (4 to 87). We found a negative linear correlation of PFD to α angles (p < 0.001), FHC (p < 0.001), and FHC during provocation (p < 0.001) with a 1 mm increase in PFD corresponding to a -2.1° (95% confidence interval (CI) -2.3 to -1.9) change in α angle and a -3.4% (95% CI -3.7 to -3.0) change in FHC and a -6.0% (-6.6 to -5.5) change in FHC during provocation. The PFD was significantly higher with increasing Graf types and in displaceable hips (p < 0.001)., Conclusion: PFD is strongly correlated to both α angles and hip displaceability, as measured by FHC and FHC during provocation, in ultrasound of newborn hips. The PFD increases as the hips become more dysplastic and/or displaceable., Competing Interests: R. D. Maimburg is the programme leader for the PhD school at Aarhus University., (© 2024 Husum et al.)
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- 2024
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194. Exploring the Feasibility and Usability of Smartphones for Monitoring Physical Activity in Orthopedic Patients: Prospective Observational Study.
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Ghaffari A, Kildahl Lauritsen RE, Christensen M, Rolighed Thomsen T, Mahapatra H, Heck R, Kold S, and Rahbek O
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- Humans, Female, Male, Feasibility Studies, Exercise, Data Collection, Smartphone, Mobile Applications
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Background: Smartphones are often equipped with inertial sensors that measure individuals' physical activity (PA). However, their role in remote monitoring of the patients' PAs in telemedicine needs to be adequately explored., Objective: This study aimed to explore the correlation between a participant's actual daily step counts and the daily step counts reported by their smartphone. In addition, we inquired about the usability of smartphones for collecting PA data., Methods: This prospective observational study was conducted among patients undergoing lower limb orthopedic surgery and a group of nonpatients as control. The data from the patients were collected from 2 weeks before surgery until 4 weeks after the surgery, whereas the data collection period for the nonpatients was 2 weeks. The participant's daily step count was recorded by PA trackers worn 24/7. In addition, a smartphone app collected the number of daily steps registered by the participants' smartphones. We compared the cross-correlation between the daily steps time series obtained from the smartphones and PA trackers in different groups of participants. We also used mixed modeling to estimate the total number of steps, using smartphone step counts and the characteristics of the patients as independent variables. The System Usability Scale was used to evaluate the participants' experience with the smartphone app and the PA tracker., Results: Overall, 1067 days of data were collected from 21 patients (n=11, 52% female patients) and 10 nonpatients (n=6, 60% female patients). The median cross-correlation coefficient on the same day was 0.70 (IQR 0.53-0.83). The correlation in the nonpatient group was slightly higher than that in the patient group (median 0.74, IQR 0.60-0.90 and median 0.69, IQR 0.52-0.81, respectively). The likelihood ratio tests on the models fitted by mixed effects methods demonstrated that the smartphone step count was positively correlated with the PA tracker's total number of steps (χ
2 1 =34.7, P<.001). In addition, the median usability score for the smartphone app was 78 (IQR 73-88) compared with median 73 (IQR 68-80) for the PA tracker., Conclusions: Considering the ubiquity, convenience, and practicality of smartphones, the high correlation between the smartphones and the total daily step count time series highlights the potential usefulness of smartphones in detecting changes in the number of steps in remote monitoring of a patient's PA., (©Arash Ghaffari, Rikke Emilie Kildahl Lauritsen, Michael Christensen, Trine Rolighed Thomsen, Harshit Mahapatra, Robert Heck, Søren Kold, Ole Rahbek. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (https://mhealth.jmir.org), 04.07.2023.)- Published
- 2023
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195. MRI May Be More Valuable than Pelvic Radiographs in the Assessment of Paediatric Borderline Acetabular Dysplasia.
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Husum HC, Bach Hellfritzsch M, Henriksen M, Gottliebsen M, and Rahbek O
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The osseous acetabular index (OAI) and cartilaginous acetabular index (CAI) is often used in diagnosing acetabular dysplasia (AD) in children. We examined the reliability of OAI and CAI in AD diagnostics and compared OAI measurements obtained from radiographs versus MRI. Four raters performed retrospective repeated measurements of the OAI and CAI on pelvic radiographs and MRI scans of 16 consecutive patients (mean age 5 years (2-8)) examined for borderline AD during a period of 2½ years. In MRI, the image selected for analysis by the raters was also registered. Spearman's correlation, scatter plots, and Bland-Altman (BA) plots were analysed for correlation between OAI on pelvic radiographs (OAIR) and MRI scans (OAIMRI), while intra- and interrater reliability was assessed for OAIR, OAIMRI, CAI, and MRI image selection using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). ICC values for inter- and intrarater reliability of OAIR, OAIMRI, and CAI were all above 0.65, with no significant differences observed. ICC values (CI) for individual raters' MRI image selection was 0.99 (0.998-0.999). The mean difference (95% CI) between OAIR and OAIMRI was -0.99 degrees (-1.84; -0.16), while the mean absolute difference (95% CI) between OAIR and OAIMRI was 3.68 degrees (3.17; 4.20). Absolute differences between OAIR and OAIMRI was independent of pelvic positioning or time interval between radiographs and MRI scans. OAI and CAI had high Intrarater reliability but mediocre interrater reliability. There was an absolute difference of 3.7 degrees in OAI between pelvic radiographs and MRI scans.
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- 2023
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196. Complications and risk factors of intramedullary bone lengthening nails: a retrospective multicenter cohort study of 314 FITBONE and PRECICE nails.
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Frost MW, Rahbek O, Iobst C, Bafor A, Duncan M, and Kold S
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Leg Length Inequality surgery, Cohort Studies, Nails, Bone Nails, Femur surgery, Risk Factors, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Fracture Fixation, Intramedullary adverse effects, Bone Lengthening
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Intramedullary bone-lengthening nails have become increasingly popular. The 2 most used and successful nails are the FITBONE and the PRECICE nails. Uniform reporting is lacking on complications of intramedullary bone-lengthening nails. The purpose was therefore to assess and categorize the complications of lower limb bone-lengthening nails and investigate risk factors., Patients and Methods: We performed a retrospective review of patients operated on with intramedullary lengthening nails at 2 hospitals. We included only lower limb lengthening with FITBONE and PRECICE nails. Recorded patient data was patient demographics, nail information, and any complication. Complications were graded according to severity and origin classification. Complication risk factors were assessed with modified Poisson regression., Results: 314 segments in 257 patients were included. The FITBONE nail was predominantly used (75%), and most of the lengthenings were performed in the femur (80%). 53% of the patients had complications. 269 complications were identified in 175 segments (144 patients). Device-related complications were most frequent (0.3 complications/segment), followed by joint complications (0.2 complications/segment). An increased relative risk was found for complications in the tibia compared with the femur and for age groups above 30 years compared with the 10-19 years group., Conclusion: Complications with intramedullary bone lengthening nails were more frequent than has previously been reported, with 53% of patients sustaining a complication. Future studies need to document the complications meticulously so that the true risk can be established.
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- 2023
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197. Case Report of Femoral Neck Stress Fracture in X-linked Hypophosphatemic Rachitis Patient Treated with Mechanical Axis Correction and a Literature Review.
- Author
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Tirta M, Rahbek O, and Kold S
- Abstract
Introduction: X-linked hypophosphatemic rachitis (XLHR) is the most common cause of hereditary rickets that can lead to long bone deformities requiring multiple surgical correction procedures. In addition, high rates of fractures are reported in adult XLHR patients. This study aimed to report a case of femoral neck stress fracture in XLHR patient treated with mechanical axis correction. No previous studies demonstrating a combined valgus correction and cephalomedullary nail fixation were identified in the literature., Case Report: A 47-year-old male patient with XLHR attended the outpatient clinic with severe left hip pain. X-rays revealed a left proximal femoral varus deformity and a femoral neck stress fracture. After 1 month without improvement of pain, and no radiographic sign of healing, correction of the proximal femoral varus deformity and fixation of the cervical neck fracture was achieved by a cephalomedullary nail. At 8 months follow-up, hip pain relief was achieved with radiographic healing of the femoral neck stress fracture and the proximal femoral osteotomy., Conclusion: A review of the literature was performed to identify any case report of femoral neck fractures fixation due to coxa vara in an adult. Both coxa vara and XLHR can cause femoral neck stress fracture. This study presented the surgical technique for treating a rare case of femoral neck stress fracture in a XLHR patient with coxa vara. Pain relief and bone healing were achieved by combined deformity correction and fracture fixation with a femoral cephalomedullary nail. The technique for deformity correction and cephalomedullary nail insertion in the patient with coxa vara is shown., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest: Nil, (Copyright: © Indian Orthopaedic Research Group.)
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- 2023
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198. Scoping review protocol to map the use of text-based two-way communication between patients and healthcare professionals after hospital discharge and identify facilitators and barriers to implementation.
- Author
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Jensen LWH, Ghaffari A, Dinesen BI, Rahbek O, and Kold S
- Subjects
- Communication, Delivery of Health Care, Hospitals, Humans, Research Design, Review Literature as Topic, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Health Personnel, Patient Discharge
- Abstract
Introduction: After discharge, patients face multiple risks where timely communication with healthcare professionals is required. eHealth has proposed new possibilities for asynchronous text-based two-way communication between patients and healthcare professionals during this time, and studies show positive effects on clinical outcomes, care coordination and patient satisfaction. However, there are challenges to the adoption of text-based two-way communication, potentially undermining the positive effects in clinical practice. Knowledge of these factors may inform future research and implementations. No reviews have provided an overview of the use of text-based two-way communication after discharge and the identified facilitators and barriers. Therefore, the objective of this scoping review is to systematically identify and map available research that assess the use of text-based two-way communication between patients and healthcare professionals after hospital discharge, including facilitators and barriers to implementation., Methods and Analysis: We will include all studies describing the use of text-based two-way communication between patients and healthcare professionals after discharge from hospital. A preliminary search of PubMed (PubMed.gov), EMBASE (Elsevier), CINAHL (EBSCO), PsycINFO (Ovid), Cochrane Library (Wiley), Web of Science (Clarivate) and Scopus (Elsevier) was undertaken on 9 November 2021. The search will be updated for the full scoping review, and reference lists of relevant papers reviewed. Two reviewers will independently screen the literature for inclusion. Data will be extracted and charted in accordance with a data extraction form developed from the research questions and inspired by Consolidated Framework Implementation Research. Findings will be presented in tabular format and a descriptive summary, and reported in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews checklist., Ethics and Dissemination: This scoping review will not require ethics approval. The dissemination strategy involves peer review publication and presentation at conferences., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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199. Pubo-Femoral Distances Measured Reliably by Midwives in Hip Dysplasia Ultrasound.
- Author
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Husum HC, Bach Hellfritzsch M, Maimburg RD, Henriksen M, Lapitskaya N, Møller-Madsen B, and Rahbek O
- Abstract
The pubo-femoral distance (PFD) has been suggested as an ultrasound screening tool for developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH). The aim of this study was to examine if midwives undergoing minimal training could reliably perform pediatric hip ultrasound and PFD measurements. Eight recruited midwives performed two rounds of independent blinded PFD measurements on 15 static ultrasound images and participated in four supervised live-scanning sessions. The midwives were compared to a group of three experienced musculoskeletal radiologists. Reliability was evaluated using inter-rater correlation coefficients (ICC). Linear regression was used to quantify the learning curve of the midwives as a group. There was near complete intra- and inter-rater agreement (ICC > 0.89) on static ultrasound images across both rounds of rating for midwives and radiologists. The midwives performed a mean of 29 live hip scans (range 24−35). The mean difference between midwives and supervising radiologists was 0.36 mm, 95% CI (0.12−0.61) for the first session, which decreased to 0.20 mm, 95% CI (0.04−0.37) in the fourth session. ICC for PFD measurements increased from 0.59 mm, 95% CI (0.37−0.75) to 0.78 mm, 95% CI (0.66−0.86) with progression in sessions. We conclude that midwives reliably perform PFD measurements of pediatric hips with minimal training.
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- 2022
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200. Do Surgeons Agree on Severity and Origin of Complications in Bone-lengthening Nails? An Inter- and Intra-rater Reliability Study.
- Author
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Frost MW, Rahbek O, Fridberg M, Mikužis M, and Kold S
- Abstract
Background: Bone-lengthening nails result in various complications with different severity and origin. However, no universal reporting system for complications has been agreed upon, making it difficult to compare different nail designs and patient populations. This study aimed to assess the inter- and intra-rater agreement of a classification system of complications according to severity and origin., Materials and Methods: Four orthopaedic surgeons assessed 48 complications retrieved from patient charts in a single-centre cohort and 49 literature complications cases. Complications were classified according to severity grading (I, II, IIIA and IIIB) from Black et al. and origin with eight main types and 33 subtypes. A blinded independent assessment was performed twice at least six weeks apart. Cohen/Congers kappa estimated for the inter- and intra-rater agreement was interpreted after Svanholm et al., Results: The surgeons had a good inter-rater agreement for complication severity with a kappa value of 0.68 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.56-0.79] and complication origin with a kappa value of 0.63 (CI: 0.53-0.73), respectively, on the cohort cases. In literature cases, a good agreement on complication severity and origin grading was shown by kappa values of 0.64 (CI: 0.53-0.75) and 0.74 (CI: 0.65-0.83). The intra-rater assessment of complication severity and origin grading had good to excellent agreement with kappa values ranging from 0.51 to 0.97., Conclusion and Clinical Significance: The study presents the first structured complication classification on severity and origin in intramedullary bone-lengthening nails. A good reproducibility agreement in both severity and origin was found between four orthopaedic surgeons for both cohort and literature complication cases. For clinical and research purposes, a shared language for communicating complications is essential. We encourage future studies to use a structured and validated complication classification., How to Cite This Article: Frost MW, Rahbek O, Fridberg M, et al . Do Surgeons Agree on Severity and Origin of Complications in Bone-lengthening Nails? An Inter- and Intra-rater Reliability Study. Strategies Trauma Limb Reconstr 2022;17(3):153-158., Competing Interests: Source of support: The authors’ institutions funded the study. Conflict of interest: None, (Copyright © 2022; The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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