| Literature DB >> 18271951 |
Shabir Ahmed Dhar1, Masood Iqbal Bhat, Ajaz Mustafa, Mohammed Ramzan Mir, Mohammed Farooq Butt, Manzoor Ahmed Halwai, Amin Tabish, Murtaza Asif Ali, Arshiya Hamid.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Management of orthopaedic injuries in polytrauma cases continues to challenge the orthopaedic traumatologist. Mass disasters compound this challenge further due to delayed referral. Recently there has been increasing evidence showing that damage control surgery has advantages that are absent in the early total care modality. We studied the damage control modality in the management of polytrauma cases with orthopaedic injuries who had been referred to our hospital after more than 24 hours of sustaining their injuries in an earthquake. This study was conducted on 51 cases after reviewing their records and complete management one year after the trauma.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18271951 PMCID: PMC2253507 DOI: 10.1186/1752-2897-2-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Trauma Manag Outcomes ISSN: 1752-2897
Figure 1A]Compound Intraarticular fracture of the distal femur. B] Stabilized by a transarticular external fixator. C] Final conversion to the Ilizarov fixator.
Figure 2Type II Compound fracture tibia converted to an Ilizarov fixator, and the final result.
Figure 3Type IIIa fracture tibia stabilized by an external fixator. The fracture showed signs of union on return referral whence this treatment modality was continued. The final result shows union.
Figure 4Type IIIb fracture of the tibia stabilized by an external fixator. The fracture was converted to an interlocking nail and the final result is shown.