| Literature DB >> 31988652 |
Markus A Küper1, Robert Bachmann2, Götz F Wenig1, Patrick Ziegler1, Alexander Trulson3, Inga M Trulson3, Christian Minarski1, Ruth Ladurner2, Ulrich Stöckle4, Andreas Höch5, Steven C Herath6, Fabian M Stuby3.
Abstract
Background: Pelvic fractures are rare but serious injuries. The influence of a concomitant abdominal trauma on the time point of surgery and the quality of care regarding quality of reduction or the clinical course in pelvic injuries has not been investigated yet.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal trauma; Acetabular fracture; Pelvic ring fracture; Pelvic trauma; Postoperative reduction; Registry study
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31988652 PMCID: PMC6969428 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-020-0290-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Fig. 1Study protocol from the German Pelvic Registry. Group A consists of patients with an isolated pelvic fracture. Group B consists of patients with a combined pelvic fracture and abdominal injury. The remaining 4.296 patients were excluded from the study. The abdominal injury was defined as an AIS (Abdomen) > 0
Fig. 2Study protocol for the acetabular fractures from the German Pelvic Registry. Group C consists of patients with an isolated acetabular fracture. Group D consists of patients with a combined acetabular fracture and an abdominal injury. The remaining 14.006 patients were excluded from the study. The abdominal injury was defined as an AIS (Abdomen) > 0
Comparison of the demographic data and fracture distribution between patients with an isolated pelvic fracture (group A) and a combined abdominal/pelvic injury (group B)
| Group A | Group B | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Number ( | 8.151 | 3.537 | |
| Age (years) | 70.5 ± 20.4 [4–105] | 47.3 ± 22.0 [12–92] | < 0.001 # |
| Gender | < 0.001 * | ||
| Male ( | 35.5% (2.893) | 62.1% (2.195) | |
| Female ( | 65.5% (5.258) | 37.9% (1.342) | |
| ISS | 9 (5) | 26 (17) | < 0.001 § |
| Type of pelvic fracture | 0.28 | ||
| Pelvic ring fracture | 73.1% (5.956) | 74.9% (2.650) | |
| Acetabular fracture | 23.3% (1.898) | 11.2% (397) | |
| Combined pelvic ring + acetabular fracture | 3.6% (297) | 13.9% (490) | |
| Type of pelvic ring fracture | < 0.001 * | ||
| Stable (Tile A) | 44.8% (2.669) | 20.0% (530) | |
| Unstable (Tile B/C) | 55.2% (3.287) | 80.0% (2.120) |
ISS, Injury Severity Score
The data of the ISS are given as median and IQR.
*Mann-Whitney U test (isolated pelvic fracture vs. combined injury)
§Median-test (isolated pelvic fracture vs. combined injury)
#Student’s t test (isolated pelvic fracture vs. combined injury)
Comparison of the clinical course between patients with an isolated pelvic fracture (group A) and patients with a combined abdominal/pelvic injury (group B). Patients in group B were operated significantly more often due to their pelvic fracture. The time until emergency stabilization was shorter in group B, while the time until definitive pelvic surgery was longer. The clinical course was significantly prolonged with increased rates of morbidity and mortality.
| Group A | Group B | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Number ( | 8.151 | 3.537 | |
| Hemodynamical status at admission | < 0.001* | ||
| Hb <8.0g/dl | 12.2 % (6/49) | 24.7 % (174/705) | |
| RRsyst. <100mmHg | 17.1% (7/41) | 32.7 % (224/686) | |
| Operative pelvic stabilization | |||
| Emergency stabilization | 6.7 % (547) | 34.4 % (1.216) | <0.001* |
| Definitive pelvic fixation | 29.9 % (2.440) | 53.4 % (1.888) | <0.001* |
| Time until emergency stabilization (min) | 113 ± 97 [2 – 420] | 76 ± 76 [2 – 406] | <0.001# |
| Time until definitive fixation (days) | 5.4 ± 8.0 [0 – 42] | 5.2 ± 5.5 [0 – 43] | 0.19# |
| Clinical course | |||
| Length of hospital stay (days) | 13 ± 14 [0 – 213] | 27 ± 25 [0 – 287] | <0.001# |
| Overall morbidity | 9.9 % (805) | 21.9 % (776) | <0.001* |
| Osteosynthesis-associated morbidity | 7.6 % (186) | 10.6 % (201) | 0.001* |
| Overall mortality | 1.9 % (157) | 8.0 % (287) | <0.001* |
*Mann-Whitney-U-test (isolated pelvic fracture vs. combined injury)
#Student`s t-test (isolated pelvic fracture vs. combined injury)
Clinical and surgical outcome of patients with isolated acetabular fractures (group C) and with a combined acetabular/abdominal injury (group D). Group D patients underwent significantly more often an emergency stabilization of the acetabular fracture. Definitive surgery was not different in both groups but the patients in group D were later operated. While the patients in group D were treated significantly longer and had a higher overall complication rate, there was no difference regarding the osteosynthesis-associated complications
| Group C | Group D | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Number ( | 1.898 | 397 | |
| Duration of surgery (min) | 176 ± 81 [60–760] | 198 ± 104 [60–723] | < 0.001# |
| Blood loss (ml) | 600 ± 511 [100–3000] | 660 ± 514 [100–3000] | 0.46 |
| Step preoperatively (mm) | 7.6 ± 8.1 [0–160] | 8.0 ± 13.8 [0–160] | 0.01# |
| Step postoperatively (mm) | 1.2 ± 2.5 [0–33] | 1.1 ± 2.2 [0–25] | 0.28 |
| Quality of reduction by Matta score | 0.39 | ||
| Grade 1: 0–2 mm residual step (anatomical) | 84.0 % (982) | 85.3 % (221) | |
| Grade 2: 2–3 mm residual step (imperfect) | 4.9 % (57) | 6.6 % (17) | |
| Grade 3: > 3 mm residual step (poor) | 8.5 % (100) | 6.2 % (16) | |
| No postoperative data available | 2.6 % (30) | 1.9 % (5) |
*Mann-Whitney U test (isolated acetabular fracture vs. combined injury)
#Student’s t test (isolated acetabular fracture vs. combined injury)