Title: Orthopaedic Trauma
1Orthopaedic Trauma
- Jeremy Hall
- St. Michaels Hospital
- September 29, 2009
2Outline
- Compartment Syndrome
- Open Fractures
- Pelvic Fractures
3Compartment SyndromeDefinition
- Elevated tissue pressure within a closed fascial
space - Reduces tissue perfusion
- Results in cell death
- Pathogenesis
- Too much inflow (edema, hemorrhage)
- Decreased outflow (venous obstruction, tight
dressing/cast)
4Compartment Syndrome Pathophysiology
- Normal tissue pressure
- 0-4 mm Hg
- 8-10 with exertion
- Absolute pressure threshold
- 30 mm Hg - Mubarak
- 45 mm Hg - Matsen
- Pressure gradient threshold
- lt 20 - 30 mm Hg within diastolic pressure
Whitesides - McQueen, et al
5Compartment Syndrome Tissue Survival
- Muscle
- 3-4 hours - reversible changes
- 6 hours - variable damage
- 8 hours - irreversible changes
- Nerve
- 2 hours - decreased nerve conduction
- 4 hours - neuropraxia
- 8 hours - irreversible changes
6Compartment Syndrome Etiology
- Fractures-closed and open
- Blunt trauma
- Temp vascular occlusion
- Cast/dressing
- Closure of fascial defects
- Burns/electrical
- Exertional states
- GSW
- IV/A-lines
- Hemophiliac/coagulopathy
- Intraosseous IV(infant)
- Snake bite
- Arterial injury
7Compartment Syndrome Diagnosis
- Pain out of proportion to injury
- Pain with passive stretch
- Palpably tense compartment
- Paresthesia/hypoesthesia
- Paralysis
- Pulselessness/pallor
8Compartment Syndrome Emergent Treatment
- Remove cast or dressing
- Place limb at level of heart
- (DO NOT ELEVATE to optimize perfusion)
- Alert OR and Anesthesia
- Bedside procedure
- Medical treatment
- Consider coexistent crush
- ? Renal prophylaxis
- Maximize cardiac output
9Compartment Syndrome Surgical Treatment
- Fasciotomy
- prophylactic release of pressure before permanent
damage occurs. - Will not reverse injury from trauma.
- GOAL RESTORE PERFUSION
- Fracture care
- Rigid stabilization
- Ex-fix
- IM Nail (locking optional)
10Compartment Syndrome Indications for Fasciotomy
- Unequivocal clinical findings
- Pressure within 15-20 (30) mm hg of DBP
- Rising tissue pressure
- Significant tissue injury or high risk pt
- gt 6 hours of total limb ischemia
- Injury at high risk of compartment syndrome
- CONTRAINDICATION
- Missed CS (gt24-48 hrs)
11Leg Fasciotomies
- 2 Generous skin incisions (Mubarak 1977)
- medial
- lateral
- Release completely all 4 fascial compartments
- Beware of neurovascular structures to prevent
iatrogenic injury
12Compartment Syndrome Other Areas
- Can occur anywhere in the body
- Hand
- Arm
- Buttock/thigh
- BEWARE arterial injury.consider angiogram
- Abdominal
- With you general surgeons!
13Outcomes
- Heemskerk et al, World J Surg, 2003
- 40 successive cases
- 6 cases ACS from Gen Surg procedures in
lithotomy position - Majority trauma/vascular cases
- 15 MORTALITY
- 12 amputation
- Dysfunctional limb 27
- Functional 45
- AGE most significant factor
- Finkelstein et al
- Fasciotomy for missed compartment syndrome
- 50 incidence death, sepsis, deep infection
14Open Fractures
- All fractures have some degree of soft tissue
injury - Prognosis determined by
- Amount of energy
- transferred to the soft
- tissue and bone
- Degree of contamination
- and type of bacteria
- Patient factors
15Introduction
- Energy Transfer
- Fall from curb
- 100 ft-lbs
- Skiing
- 300-500 ft-lbs
- High-Velocity GSW
- 2000 ft-lbs
- Automobile Bumper _at_ 20 MPH
- 100,000 ft-lbs
16Skin Lesions
- Blisters
- Clear
- Sanguineous
- Abrasions
- Degloving
- Morel-Lavalle
17Open Fracture
- Definition
- A break in the skin and soft tissues
communicating with a fracture or its hematoma.
18Gustilo-AndersonGrade I
19Gustilo-AndersonGrade II
20Gustilo-AndersonGrade IIIA
21Gustilo-AndersonGrade IIIA
IIIA Includes severe comminution despite size of
skin wound.
22Gustilo-AndersonGrade IIIB
23Gustilo-AndersonGrade IIIC
24Assessment
- History
- Mechanism
- High or low energy?
- Time since injury
- Pre-morbid conditions
- Other injuries
25Assessment
- Physical Exam
- One look soft tissue exam
- Neurological status
- Vascular status
- Compartments
26Assessment
- X-rays
- Standard two 90 views
- Joint above and below fracture
27Emergent Treatment
- One Look Exam
- Sterile Dressing
- No ER Cultures
- Poor indicator of probability of infection and
organism - expensive
- Realign and Splint
28Tetanus Toxoid
Tetanus Toxoid 2.5 cc to all poly-trauma
patients, otherwise
IMMUNIZATION HISTORY NON-TETANUS PRONE TETANUS PRONE
UNKNOWN YES YES
gt3 IMMUNIZATIONS (lt5 YEARS) NO NO
Tetanus Prone gt6 hours old, complex soft tissue
injury, wound gt1 cm deep, missile, crush, burn,
frostbite, devitalized tissues, soil
contaminants, denervated, ischemic, early
infection.
29Tetanus Immune Globulin
250-500 units IM
IMMUNIZATION HISTORY NON-TETANUS PRONE TETANUS PRONE
UNKNOWN NO YES
gt3 IMMUNIZATIONS (lt5 YEARS) NO NO
30Bacteriology of Open Fractures
Blunt Trauma, Low Energy GSW Staph, Strept
Farm Wounds Clostridia
Fresh Water Pseudomonas, Aeromonas
Sea Water Aeromonas, Vibrios
War Wounds, High Energy GSW Gram Negative
31Recommended Antibiotic Treatment
1 Gen Ceph Gent PCN
Grade I ?
Grade II ? /-
Grade III ? ? /-
Farm/War Wounds ? ? ?
(Gustilo, et al JBJS 72A 1990)
32Duration of Antibiotic Treatment
- Initial 72 hours
- 48 hours after each subsequent procedure
33Treatment
- Principles
- Limb Salvage?
- Vascular Injury?
34Principles of ID
- Longitudinal incisions-extensile exposures
- Excise non viable tissue
- Systematic and detailed approach
- Irrigation
- Stabilize fracture
35ID
- Systematic
- Skin
- Fascia and fat
- Muscle 4 Cs of muscle viability
- Contractility
- Capacity to bleed
- Consistency
- Color
36Stable Fixation
- Reduces infection
- Options
- External fixation
- /- delayed internal fixation
- IM Nail
- ORIF
37Wound Closure
- Primary Closure?
- Delayed closure/coverage
- STSG
- Flaps
- VAC
38Pelvic Ring Injuries
39Epidemiology
- Pelvic fractures account 1-3 of all fxs
- 60 Male
- Mechanism
- MVC (57-71)
- Collision w/ pedestrian (13-18)
- Motorcycle accident (5-9)
- Falls (4-9)
- Crush injury (4-5)
40Epidemiology
- Overall reported mortality figures for pelvic
injuries range from 8-13 - Higher energy injuries greater mortality
- Peds vs car (23)
Poole GV, Ward EF Causes of mortality in
patients with pelvic fractures, Orthop 17691,
1994. Pohlemann T et al Pelvic fractures
epidemiology, therapy and long term outcome.
Overview of the multicenter studey of the pelvis
study group, Unfallchirurg 99160, 1996.
41Key Point
- Presence of a pelvic fracture indicates the
profound magnitude of disruptive energy at the
time of injury - Alerts to likelihood of major injury to other
body systems
Pelvic fractures bad, associated injuries very
bad!
42Pelvic Anatomy
- Inominate bones (2)
- ilium, ischium pubis
- Sacrum
- Coccyx
43Pelvic Anatomy
- Pelvis contains 5 joints
- Lumbosacral
- Sacroiliac
- Sacrococcygeal
- Symphysis pubis
- Acetabulum movement
44Pelvic Amatomy
- Ring structure is basis for stability
- Stability via ligaments
- Iliolumbar
- Sacroiliac
- Sacrotuberous
- Sacrospinous
45Pelvic Anatomy
- Pelvis is extremely vascular
- Majority of blood from hypogastrics (internal
iliac) - Proximity to pelvic arch
- Superior gluteal largest branch, commonly
injured in posterior fxs - Obturator internal pudendal often injured in
fxs involving pubic rami
46Pelvic Anatomy
- Nerve supply from lumbar sacral plexi
- Proximity to posterior arch of pelvic ring
47Pelvic Radiography
- Unique skeletal evaluation in trauma setting
- Only one view is obtained
- AP Pelvis
- Most injuries can be identified
- More commonly missed
- Acetabulum, sacroiliac joints, sacrum
- May not define the extent of the injury
48AP Pelvis
- Adequacy
- Both iliac crests
- Proximal femurs
- Lower lumbar spine
- No rotation
- Pubic symphysis aligns midline with sacral
spinous processes
49Pelvic CT
- CT has replaced supplementary plain-films
- Greater anatomic detail
- The best study for acetabular sacral fxs
- Assesses extent of instability
- Evaluates retroperitoneal hematoma
50Pelvic CT
- Specific indications for pelvic CT
- Acetabular fractures
- Dislocations of the hip
- All potential or recognized sacral fractures
- All potential or recognized SI injuries
- Question of instability
- Patient must be hemodynamically stable
Hunter JC, Brandser EA, Tran KA. Pelvic and
acetabular trauma. Radiol Clin North Am.
199735559-590.
51Angiography
- Method of diagnosing controlling
life-threatening arterial hemorrhage in pelvic
fractures - Indicated in hemodynamic instability when
- Thoracic source r/o
- External source r/o
- Negative DPL
- Presence of pelvic fx
- Use in conjunction with mechanical fracture
stabilization (Ex-Fix)
52Tile Classification
Tile Type B Rotationally Unstable Vertically
Stable
Tile Type C Rotationally Unstable Vertically
Unstable
Tile Type A Stable
53Young Burgess ClassificationMechanism of
Injury Direction of Force
- Three patterns
- Lateral compression (50)
- Pedestrian struck on side by car
- MVC in which car is broadsided
- AP compression/open book (25)
- Head-on MVC
- Pedestrian struck anteriorly by car
- Vertical Shear (5)
- Fall or jump from height
- Combination (20)
54Young Burgess Classification
Vertical Shear
AP Compression
Lateral Compression
55Lateral Compression LC-IIIWindswept Pelvis
Contralateral sacral fx SI joint diastasis
Ipsilateral SI disruption Iliac wing fracture
Pubic rami fractures
56AP Compression APC-III
Wide SI Joint
Wide Pubic Symphysis
57Vertical Shear
- Least common
- Vertical force
- Fall from height, landing on LE
- Pelvis disrupted in vertical plane
- Cephaloposterior displacement
- Malgaigne fracture
- Grossly unstable!
- High incidence of neurovascular injury
58Vertical Shear
- Left hemipelvis displaced cephalo-posteriorly
- Associated sacroiliac joint diastasis
- Pubic rami fracture
- Ipsilateral (usually)
- Vertically oriented
59Vertical Shear
Complete disruption of posterior elements
60Factors Increasing Mortality
- Type of pelvic ring injury
- Posterior disruption
- High ISS
- Tile, 1980
- McMurty, 1980
- Hemorrhagic shock on admission
- Gilliland, 1982
61Factors Increasing Mortality
- Requirement for large quantities of blood
- 24 u vs. 7 u, McMurty, 1980
- Perineal lacerations, open fractures
- Hanson, 1991
- Associated injuries
- Head abdominal, 50 mortality
- Age
- Looser, 1976
62Extremely High Energy Injuries with a Large
Number and Variety of Associated Injuries
63Instability
64Shock
65Etiology of Hypovolemic Shock
- Intra-thoracic bleeding
- Intra-peritoneal bleeding
- Ultrasound
- Peritoneal tap
- CT
- Retroperitoneal bleeding
66Burgess, J Trauma 1990
- Mortality 8.6
- 2/210 pelvic injury patients where pelvic injury
was primary cause of death - Contributed 10/210
67Adams, JOT 2003
- Up to 25 pelvic fractures in traffic fatalities
- Most commonly vertically unstable fractures
- Perhaps more common than originally thought
68Hemorrhage Control
- Average blood replacement (units)
- LC 3.6
- AP 14.8
- VS 9.2
- Mortality
- 3 hemodynamically stable patients
- 38 unstable patients
69Hemorrhage (cont.)
- Sheet/C-clamp
- Skeletal traction
- External fixation
- Mast suit
- Embolization
- Surgical stabilization /- packing
70Hemorrhage (cont.)
- Contributes to 60 of deaths
- Retroperitoneal veins
- 20 arterial injury
71Coagulopathy
- Hypothermia
- ? Ca2 (blood citrate)
- Acidotic
72Prolonged Hypovolemia
- Aggravate pulmonary contusion
- Head and visceral injuries
- Increased sepsis
- Adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
- Multiple organ failure
73Instability
- Only patients with mechanical instability can
have hemodynamic instability related to the
pelvic injury
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76Radiographic Signs of Instability
- Sacroiliac displacement of 5 mm in any plane
- Posterior fracture gap (rather than impaction)
- Avulsion of fifth lumbar transverse process,
lateral border of sacrum (sacrotuberous
ligament), or ischial spine (sacrospinous
ligament)
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78Indications for Angiography
- Unexplained blood loss after stabilization and
aggressive resuscitation - Pulselessness extremity
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81Surgical
- Stabilization with internal fixation of pelvis
- Stabilization of hemodynamic instability with
surgical packing of retroperitoneal space
82Associated Injuries
- Other MSK
- Long bone injuries
- Knee injuries
- Foot injuries
- Abdominal
- Urologic/Gyne
- Neurological
83Open Pelvic Injuries
- Colon, rectum, or perineum ? Early diverting
colostomy - Soft-tissue wounds ? aggressively debrided
- Early repair of vaginal lacerations minimize
subsequent pelvic abscess
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85Colostomy is Indicated for Any Open Injury Where
the Fecal Stream Will Contact the Open Area
86Urologic Injuries
- 15 incidence
- Blood at meatus or high riding prostate
- Eventual swelling of scrotum and labia
(occasional arterial bleeder requiring surgery)
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88Urologic (cont.)
- Retrograde urethrogram indicated in pelvic
injured patients but insure hemodynamic stability
or embolization may be difficult due to dye
extravasation
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90Urologic (cont.)
- Intra extra peritoneal bladder ruptures are
repaired - Foley preferred supra-pubic catheter tunneled to
prevent ant. wound contamination
91Thats A lot of Info!Any Questions??
92Thanks!