| Literature DB >> 32270221 |
Helene Ernstberger1, Philipp Pieroh2, Andreas Höch2, Christoph Josten2, Steven C Herath3, Georg Osterhoff2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: In elderly patients with minimally displaced acetabulum fractures, the patients' inability to partially weight-bear and the need for early mobilisation may trigger the decision towards a treatment with higher primary stability. The purpose of this study was to compare open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF), closed reduction and percutaneous fixation (CRPIF) and non-operative treatment in geriatric minimally displaced acetabulum fractures with regard to complications and quality of reduction.Entities:
Keywords: Acetabulum fracture; Conservative treatment; Elderly; ORIF; Percutaneous fixation; Reduction
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32270221 PMCID: PMC8629882 DOI: 10.1007/s00068-020-01346-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg ISSN: 1863-9933 Impact factor: 3.693
Patients’ baseline characteristics
| Treatment | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-operative | Percutaneous | Open | Total | ||
| 429 | 62 | 117 | 608 | ||
| Age (years) | 78.7 (9.71) | 74.3 (10.02) | 74.1 (8.08) | 0.000˩ | 77.3 (9.66) |
| Gender (f:m) | 185:244 | 12:50 | 30:87 | 227:381 | |
| Fracture gap after trauma (mm) | 1.59 (1.26) | 2.47 (1.46) | 3.11 (1.57) | 0.000˩ | 1.97 (1.48) |
| Fracture step after trauma (mm) | 0.97 (1.20) | 1.32 (1.38) | 2.37 (1.54) | 0.000˩ | 1.28 (1.40) |
˩Kruskal–Wallis H test, SD in brackets
Fracture patterns
| Treatment | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-operative | Percutaneous | Open | Total | |
| N | 429 | 62 | 117 | 608 |
| Fracture pattern | ||||
| PW | 32 (7.5%) | 0 | 8 (6.8%) | 40 (6.6%) |
| PC | 20 (4.7%) | 2 (3.2%) | 4 (3.4%) | 26 (4.3%) |
| AW | 88 (20.5%) | 3 (4.8%) | 3 (2.6%) | 94 (15.5%) |
| AC | 141 (32.9%) | 30 (48.4%) | 20 (17.1%) | 191 (31.4%) |
| Transverse | 23 (5.4%) | 4 (6.5%) | 2 (1.7%) | 29 (4.9%) |
| PW/PC | 1 (0.2%) | 0 | 3 (2.6%) | 4 (0.7%) |
| Transverse/PW | 4 (0.9%) | 1 (1.6%) | 7 (6.0%) | 12 (2.0%) |
| T shaped | 27 (6.3%) | 2 (3.2%) | 4 (3.4%) | 33 (5.4%) |
| ACPHT | 71 (16.6%) | 15 (24.2%) | 37 (31.6%) | 123 (20.2%) |
| Both columns | 15 (3.5%) | 4 (6.5%) | 28 (23.9%) | 47 (7.7%) |
| Unknown | 2 (0.5%) | 0 | 0 | 2 (0.3%) |
| No classification | 5 (1.2%) | 1 (1.6%) | 1 (0.8%) | 7 (1.2%) |
PW posterior wall, PC posterior column, AW anterior wall, AC anterior column, ACPHT anterior column posterior hemitransverse
Outcome
| Treatment | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-operative | Percutaneous | Open | Total | ||
| 429 | 62 | 117 | 608 | ||
| OR duration (min) | – | 91 (52) | 169 (67) | 0.000† | 142 (73) |
| Blood loss (ml)× | – | 73 (184) | 639 (451) | 0.000‡ | 429 (464) |
| Non-surgical complications | 36 (8.4%) | 5 (8.1%) | 26 (22.2%) | 0.000* | 67 (11.0%) |
| Surgical complications | – | 3 (4.8%) | 14 (12.0%) | 0.122* | 17 (9.5%) |
| Hospital duration (days) | 12.9 (12.8) | 16.8 (12.0) | 23.6 (15.2) | 0.000˩ | 15.3 (13.8) |
| Fracture gap after treatment (mm) | – | 1.2 (1.3) | 1.3 (1.0) | 1.00˩ | 1.2 (1.1) |
| Fracture step after treatment (mm) | – | 0.5 (1.0) | 0.8 (1.0) | 0.844˩ | 0.7 (1.0) |
× 12 patients in the ORIF group had to be excluded due to blood loss of 0 ml
OR operation room
*Pearson Chi-square test
†Student’s T test
‡Mann–Whitney U test
˩Kruskal–Wallis H test, SD and percentage in brackets
Other complications
| Non-operative | Percutaneous | Open | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Other non-surgical complications | |||
| Pulmonary oedema | 1 | ||
| Atelectasis | 1 | ||
| Pneumonia | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| Pulmonary aggravation | 1 | ||
| Haemothorax | 1 | ||
| Cardiac decompensation | 1 | ||
| Pacemaker due to cardiac arrythmia | 1 | ||
| NSTEMI | 1 | ||
| Subacute myocardial ischemia | 1 | ||
| Postoperative anaemia | 1 | ||
| Drop of haemoglobin | 1 | ||
| Urinary tract infection | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| Renal failure | 1 | ||
| Renal failure of the transplanted renal | 1 | ||
| Secondary necrosis of the femoral head | 1 | ||
| Acute hepatitis | 1 | ||
| Sub ileus | 1 | ||
| Caecum perforation | 1 | ||
| Pneumoperitoneum with diagnostic laparotomy | 1 | ||
| Perianal bleeding | 1 | ||
| MRSA skin | 1 | ||
| Fall with laceration of the finger and face | 1 | ||
| Decubitus | 3 | ||
| Delir | 1 | ||
| TIA | 1 | ||
| Seizure | 1 | ||
| Loss of consciousness | 1 | ||
| TEP loosening of the other hip | 1 | ||
| Free joint body | 1 | ||
| Pain | 1 | ||
| TUR prostate | 1 | ||
| Carbon dioxide narcosis | 1 | ||
| Other surgical complications | |||
| No reduction | 1 | ||
| Dorsal extra osseous screw | 1 | ||
| Broken intra-articular K-wire | 1 | ||
| Postoperative bleeding (2 times) | 1 | ||
| Postoperative haematoma | 1 | ||
| Caecum perforation | 1 | ||
MRSA multi-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, TIA transient ischemic attack, TEP total endoprosthesis, TUR transurethral resection
Fig. 1Fracture gap of minimal displaced acetabulum fractures. Comparison of fracture gap in mm of open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) before and after surgery (red), percutaneous treatment before and after surgery (blue) and non-operative treatment (black stripes). The boxes show the percentiles 25, 50 (Median) and 75. The end of the whiskers shows 1.5 × interquartile range. Outliers and extremes are not shown. A Kruskal–Wallis H test with Dunn–Bonferroni correction was performed
Fig. 2Fracture step of minimal displaced acetabulum fractures. Comparison of fracture step in mm of open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) before and after surgery (red), percutaneous treatment before and after surgery (blue) and non-operative treatment (black stripes). The boxes show the percentiles 25, 50 (Median) and 75. The end of the whiskers shows 1.5 × interquartile range. Outliers and extremes are not shown. A Kruskal–Wallis H test with Dunn–Bonferroni correction was performed