BACKGROUND:Traumatic flail chest injury is a potentially life threatening condition traditionally treated with invasive mechanical ventilation to splint the chest wall. Longer-term sequelae of pain, deformity, and physical restriction are well described. This study investigated the impact of operative fixation in these patients. STUDY DESIGN: A prospective randomized study compared operative fixation of fractured ribs in the flail segment with current best practice mechanical ventilator management. In-hospital data, 3-month follow-up review, spirometry and CT, and 6-month quality of life (Short Form-36) questionnaire were collected. RESULTS: Patients in the operative fixation group had significantly shorter ICU stay (hours) postrandomization (285 hours [range 191 to 319 hours] for the surgical group vs 359 hours [range 270 to 581 hours] for the conservative group; p = 0.03) and lesser requirement for noninvasive ventilation after extubation (3 hours [range 0 to 25 hours] in the surgical group vs 50 hours [range 17 to 102 hours] in the conservative group; p = 0.01). No differences in spirometry at 3 months or quality of life at 6 months were noted. CONCLUSIONS:Operative fixation of fractured ribs reduces ventilation requirement and intensive care stay in a cohort of multitrauma patients with severe flail chest injury. Crown
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND:Traumatic flail chest injury is a potentially life threatening condition traditionally treated with invasive mechanical ventilation to splint the chest wall. Longer-term sequelae of pain, deformity, and physical restriction are well described. This study investigated the impact of operative fixation in these patients. STUDY DESIGN: A prospective randomized study compared operative fixation of fractured ribs in the flail segment with current best practice mechanical ventilator management. In-hospital data, 3-month follow-up review, spirometry and CT, and 6-month quality of life (Short Form-36) questionnaire were collected. RESULTS:Patients in the operative fixation group had significantly shorter ICU stay (hours) postrandomization (285 hours [range 191 to 319 hours] for the surgical group vs 359 hours [range 270 to 581 hours] for the conservative group; p = 0.03) and lesser requirement for noninvasive ventilation after extubation (3 hours [range 0 to 25 hours] in the surgical group vs 50 hours [range 17 to 102 hours] in the conservative group; p = 0.01). No differences in spirometry at 3 months or quality of life at 6 months were noted. CONCLUSIONS: Operative fixation of fractured ribs reduces ventilation requirement and intensive care stay in a cohort of multitrauma patients with severe flail chest injury. Crown
Authors: S Schulz-Drost; S Grupp; M Pachowsky; P Oppel; S Krinner; A Mauerer; F F Hennig; A Langenbach Journal: Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg Date: 2016-03-22 Impact factor: 3.693
Authors: K Uchida; T Nishimura; H Takesada; T Morioka; N Hagawa; T Yamamoto; S Kaga; T Terada; N Shinyama; H Yamamoto; Y Mizobata Journal: Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg Date: 2016-06-06 Impact factor: 3.693
Authors: Fredric M Pieracci; Suresh Agarwal; Andrew Doben; Adam Shiroff; Larwence Lottenberg; Sarah Ann Whitbeck; Thomas W White Journal: Int Orthop Date: 2017-08-29 Impact factor: 3.075