Literature DB >> 10052788

Early changes in nutrient artery blood flow following tibial nailing with and without reaming: a preliminary study.

M R Brinker1, S D Cook, J N Dunlap, P Christakis, M N Elliott.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To quantify the changes in nutrient artery blood flow following reamed and unreamed nailing of intact canine tibias.
DESIGN: In vivo animal study. INTERVENTION: Eighteen dogs underwent nutrient artery blood flow measurements over a fourteen-day period. The intervention groups consisted of controls (Group I), nailing without reaming (Group II), and nailing with reaming (Group III). MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: Nutrient artery blood flow was measured through implantable ultrasonic blood flow probes placed around the nutrient artery of the tibia.
RESULTS: Nutrient artery blood flow averaged 1.94 milliliters per minute over the fourteen-day period in Group I (no reaming or nailing performed). Nutrient artery blood flow following nailing without reaming (Group II) decreased to 44 percent of baseline values immediately after the procedure. By postoperative day 1, flow had decreased to 23 percent of baseline; over the fourteen-day period, nutrient artery blood flow recovered toward baseline values. Immediately following nailing with reaming (Group III), nutrient artery blood flow measured zero milliliters per minute. Over the fourteen-day period, nutrient artery blood flow in this group averaged 39 percent of the baseline level (range 19 to 58 percent). Whereas nutrient artery blood flow recovered toward baseline values (99 percent of baseline) by fourteen days in Group II, nutrient artery blood flow measured only 26 percent of the baseline level on postoperative day fourteen in Group III.
CONCLUSIONS: The preliminary data suggest that nailing with reaming provides a double insult to the nutrient artery distribution.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10052788     DOI: 10.1097/00005131-199902000-00010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Orthop Trauma        ISSN: 0890-5339            Impact factor:   2.512


  7 in total

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Review 2.  Operative fixation for complex tibial fractures.

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3.  The unreamed intramedullary tibial nail in tibial shaft fractures of soccer players: a prospective study.

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5.  Method for generating transparent porcine tibia showing the intraosseous artery.

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6.  Management of open fractures using a noncontact locking plate as an internal fixator.

Authors:  Azad Yıldırım; Ahmet Kapukaya; Yılmaz Mertsoy; Şehmus Yiğit; Mehmet Akif Çaçan; Ramazan Atiç
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7.  Retrospective comparison of postoperative infection and bone union between late and immediate intramedullary nailing of Gustilo grades I, II, and IIIA open tibial shaft fractures.

Authors:  Yoshiyasu Uchiyama; Yuka Kobayashi; Gro Ebihara; Kosuke Hamahashi; Masahiko Watanabe
Journal:  Trauma Surg Acute Care Open       Date:  2016-09-06
  7 in total

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