| Literature DB >> 27493818 |
Rahul Vaidya1, Kerellos Nasr2, Enrique Feria-Arias2, Rebecca Fisher3, Marvin Kajy3, Lawrence N Diebel3.
Abstract
Introduction. Open pelvic fractures make up 2-5% of all pelvic ring injuries. Their mortality has been reported to be as high as 50%. During Operation Enduring Freedom protocols for massive open pelvic injuries lead to the survival of injuries once thought to be fatal. The INFIX is a subcutaneous anterior fixator for pelvic stabilization which is stronger than external fixation. The purpose of this paper is to describe the use of INFIX and modern algorithms for massive open pelvic injuries. Methods. An IRB approved retrospective review describes 4 cases in civilian practice with massive open pelvic injuries. We also review the modern literature on open pelvic injures. Discussion. Key components in the care of massive open pelvic injuries include hemorrhage control by clamping of the aorta or REBOA when necessary and fecal/urinary diversion. The INFIX can be used internally, as a partial INFIX partial EXFIX, or as an EXFIX. Its low profile allows for easy application of wound vacs and wound care and when subcutaneous avoids pin tract infections. Conclusion. Massive open pelvic injuries are a difficult problem. Following modern protocols can help prevent mortality.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27493818 PMCID: PMC4963555 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9468285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Orthop ISSN: 2090-6757
Figure 1(Case 1) 41 yo male crushed by fork lift. APC 3 massive open pelvic ring injury and mangled left lower extremity arrived in extremis. The left leg with a vascular injury was debrided, had an above knee amputation, and eventually resulted in a hip disarticulation.
Figure 2Laparotomy was performed where intra-abdominal bleeding was controlled and then the aorta and IVC clamped low in the abdomen to stop the blood loss from his pelvis and left lower extremity.
Figure 3INFIX/EXFIX, as well as a percutaneous SI joint screw to stabilize the pelvis then antibiotic beads and wound vacs to combat the soft tissue injury.
Figure 4(a) Wound healing and (b) the fixator removed.
Figure 5This is a 62-year-old male who was involved in a motor vehicle accident. His open injury was missed initially when he arrived in extremis and developed a massive pelvic soft tissue infection requiring debridement over the first 3 days.
Figure 6After fixation bowel and urinary diversion and wound management.
Case summaries.
| Case | Injury | General surgery | Urology | Orthopaedics | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | APC 3 massive open injury | Pelvic packing, temporary Aortic control clamp, colostomy | Suprapubic, orchiectomy | INFIX/EXFIX | Survived to prosthetic fitting, bowel hooked up, Complication with heterotopic bone prosthetic fitting |
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| 2 | LC3 open | Colostomy, debridement, implanted testicles in thigh | Suprapubic | INFIX/EXFIX, iliac screw posterior SI screws | Wound healed, pelvis healed, skin healing |
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| 3 | APC3 open | Colostomy, aortic control clamp packing | Suprapubic | INFIX | Patient died in ICU POD #3 |
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| 4 | APC3 massive perineal wound with bowel hernia | Colostomy laparotomy | Suprapubic catheter | INFIX SI screws | Survived hooked up doing fine |