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Rates and Odds Ratios for Complications in Closed and Open Tibial Fractures Treated With Unreamed, Small Diameter Tibial Nails: A Multicenter Analysis of 467 Cases
- Source :
- Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma. 15:415-423
- Publication Year :
- 2001
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2001.
-
Abstract
- A multicenter trial analyzed complications and odds for complications in open and closed tibial fractures stabilized by small diameter nails.Retrospective.Four Level I trauma centers.Four hundred sixty-seven tibial fractures were included in the study. There were fifty-two proximal fractures, 219 midshaft fractures, and 196 distal fractures. Breakdown into different AO/OTA groups showed 135 Type A fractures, 216 Type B fractures, and 116 Type C fractures. Two hundred sixty-five were closed fractures and 202 were open fractures.Clinical and radiographic analysis.467 patients' tibial fractures were stabilized with small diameter tibial nails using an unreamed technique. Indications for the use of small diameter tibial nails using an unreamed technique included all types of open or closed diaphyseal fractures. The operating surgeons decided whether or not to ream based on personal experience, fracture type, and soft-tissue damage. Surgeons of Center 1 preferred to treat AO Type A and B fractures with unreamed nails, and surgeons of Centers 2, 3, and 4 preferred to treat AO Type B and C fractures with unreamed nails. Closed and open fractures were treated in approximately the same ratio.Analysis showed five (1.1 percent) deep infections (with a 5.4 percent rate of deep infections in Gustilo Grade III open fractures), forty-three delayed unions (9.2 percent), and twelve (2.6 percent) nonunions. Compartment syndromes occurred in sixty-two cases (13.3 percent), screw fatigue in forty-seven cases (10 percent), and fatigue failure of the tibial nail in three cases (0.6 percent).Fracture distraction of more than three millimeters should not be tolerated when stabilizing tibial fractures with unreamed, small-diameter nails as this increases the odds of having a delayed union by twelve times (p0.001) and a nonunion by four times (p = 0.057). There was a significant increase of complications in the group of Grade III open fractures (p0.001), AO/OTA Type C fractures (p = 0.002), and to a lesser extent in distal fractures. However, the rate of severe complications resulting in major morbidity was low.
- Subjects :
- Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Bone Nails
law.invention
Intramedullary rod
Fracture Fixation, Internal
Fractures, Open
Closed Fracture
Injury Severity Score
Postoperative Complications
Risk Factors
law
Multicenter trial
Fracture fixation
Confidence Intervals
Odds Ratio
Humans
Medicine
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Tibia
Fractures, Closed
Probability
Retrospective Studies
Fracture Healing
Osteosynthesis
Equipment Safety
business.industry
Incidence
General Medicine
musculoskeletal system
Surgery
Radiography
Tibial Fractures
Orthopedic surgery
Equipment Failure
Female
business
Follow-Up Studies
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 08905339
- Volume :
- 15
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....030877dd5b1f9e4707beb73d77c45f72
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005131-200108000-00006