Europe PMC

This website requires cookies, and the limited processing of your personal data in order to function. By using the site you are agreeing to this as outlined in our privacy notice and cookie policy.

Abstract 


Aim of study

It is the purpose of the current investigation to determine whether immediate external fixation of fractures, which is a simple and fast procedure, followed by secondary planned conversion represents a safe and reliable procedure without additional trauma in multiply injured patients (ISS > 15).

Methods

With a prospective protocol, all data of multiply injured patients with fractures which required immediate osteosynthesis were registrated. Demographic data, severity of injury (AIS and ISS), data of primary surgery and osteosyntheses, course of intensive care (organ failure, local/systemic complications, infectious protocol), secondary conversion (time, duration, osteosynthesis related complications) and further course were analysed.

Results

Out of 679 mulitiply injured patients (ISS 22), 118 required immediate surgical procedures for intracranial injury and 175 for further indications. In 45 multiply injured patients (ISS 37), 83 external fixations were performed. According to 59 planned secondary conversions (13 days), one patient developed deep infection, no other local complication was registrated. The average time for conversion procedures lasted three times longer as in immediate external fixation (43 vs. 139 min).

Conclusions

Immediate external fixation in multiply injured patients is fast and poor of complications. It is a expedient procedure which is safe and careful for critically ill patients. The required conversion procedure shows no raised rate of complications.

Citations & impact 


Impact metrics

Jump to Citations

Citations of article over time

Article citations


Go to all (11) article citations