Duus Br
Copenhagen Municipal Hospital
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Featured researches published by Duus Br.
Acta Orthopaedica | 2012
Cecilie Laubjerg Daugaard; Henrik L. Jørgensen; Troels Riis; Jes Bruun Lauritzen; Duus Br; Susanne van der Mark
Background and purpose Hip fractures are associated with high mortality, but the cause of this is still not entirely clear. We investigated the effect of surgical delay, weekends, holidays, and time of day admission on mortality in hip fracture patients. Patients and methods Using data from the Danish National Indicator Project, we identified 38,020 patients admitted from 2003 to 2010. Logistic regression analysis was used to study the association between sex, age, weekend or holiday admission, night-time admission, time to surgery, and ASA score on the one hand and mortality on the other. Results The risk of death in hospital increased with surgical delay (odds ratio (OR) = 1.3 per 24 h of delay), ASA score (OR (per point added) = 2.3), sex (OR for men 2.2), and age (OR (per 5 years) = 1.4). The mortality rate for patients admitted during weekends or public holidays, or at night, was similar to that found for those admitted during working days. Interpretation Minimizing surgical delay is the most important factor in reducing mortality in hip fracture patients.
Acta Orthopaedica | 2013
Christopher Jantzen; Henrik L. Jørgensen; Duus Br; Sune Lund Sporring; Jes Bruun Lauritzen
Background and purpose Widely different metal ion concentrations in blood and serum have been reported with metal-on-metal (MoM) implants. We reviewed the literature on blood and serum ion concentrations of chromium (Cr) and cobalt (Co) following various MoM hip arthroplasties. Methods Studies were searched for in the Medline database, Embase, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Highest mean or median ion concentrations of Cr and Co after a minimum of 1 year of follow-up were extracted and grouped according to sample- and articulation type, and average values were calculated. Results 43 studies were included and 16 different MoM implants were identified. For the different types of bearings, average ion concentrations and range were calculated from the mean or median ion concentration. The average Cr concentration ranged between 0.5 and 2.5 μg/L in blood and between 0.8 and 5.1 μg/L in serum. For Co, the range was 0.7–3.4 μg/L in blood and 0.3–7.5 μg/L in serum. Interpretation When the average blood ion concentrations calculated for the different implants, together with the concentrations measured in the individual studies, were compared with the upper acceptable limit for Cr and Co in blood, no clear pattern was recognized. Furthermore, we were unable to detect any clear difference in ion concentrations between different types of implants (THA and resurfacing).
Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2012
Anne Sofie Laulund; Jes Bruun Lauritzen; Duus Br; Mathias Mosfeldt; Henrik L. Jørgensen
OBJECTIVEnThe aim of this study was to assess the evidence for the association between different biochemical markers at admission and mortality through a meta-analysis.nnnDATA SOURCESnPubMed-, Embase-, Cochran Library and the Web of Knowledge were searched for cohort studies.nnnSTUDY SELECTIONnEligible studies were observational studies with a study population larger than 150 subjects, a mean age above 60 years and a study duration below 730 days.nnnDATA EXTRACTIONnCharacteristics of studies and outcomes of all-cause mortality were extracted from the retrieved articles. Data were pooled across studies for the individual biomarker using random- or fixed-effect analysis.nnnDATA SYNTHESISn15 eligible studies of 5 different markers on mortality were studied. The following markers were found to be of prognostic value on mortality in hip fracture patients: low haemoglobin (odds ratio, 2.78; 95% confidence interval, 2.17-3.55; P<0.00001, 3148 subjects included), low total lymphocyte count, TLC (odds ratio, 2.60; 95% confidence interval, 1.61-4.20; P<0.00001, 1689 subjects included), low albumin (odds ratio, 1.83; 95% confidence interval, 1.31-2.56; P=0.0004, 1680 subjects included), low albumin/low TLC (odds ratio, 3.00; 95% confidence interval, 1.81-4.99; P<0.0001, 704 subjects included), low albumin/high TLC (odds ratio, 3.39; 95% confidence interval, 1.83-6.29; P=0.0001, 704 subjects included), high creatinine (odds ratio, 1.58; 95% confidence interval, 1.25-1.99; P=0.0001, 3761 subjects included), and high PTH (odds ratio, 15.43; 95% confidence interval, 3.60-66.14; P=0.0002, 525 subjects included).nnnCONCLUSIONnBiochemical markers at admission are valid predictors of mortality in hip fracture patients.
Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2012
Christian Medom Madsen; Henrik L. Jørgensen; Bent Lind; Henning Ogarrio; Troels Riis; Peter Schwarz; Duus Br; Jes Bruun Lauritzen
INTRODUCTIONnPreviously, little attention has been paid as to how disturbances in the parathyroid hormone (PTH)-calcium-vitamin D-axis, such as secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT), relate to mortality amongst hip fracture patients. This study aimed to (1) determine if SHPT is associated with mortality in this group of patients, (2) investigate the association between serum (s-) PTH, s-total calcium, s-25-hydroxyvitamin D (s-25(OH)D) and mortality and (3) determine the prevalence of SHPT amongst hip fracture patients and a control group.nnnMETHODnThe study included 562 hip fracture patients (HF) (age ≥ 70 years) admitted to a Danish university hospital. The hip fracture patients were prospectively enrolled in a dedicated hip fracture database. Each hip fracture patient was exactly matched according to age and sex with two controls randomly chosen from a control population of 21,778 subjects who had s-PTH, s-total calcium and s-25(OH)D measured at the Copenhagen General Practitioners Laboratory after referral from their general practitioner. The control group (Con) thus consisted of 1124 subjects.nnnRESULTSnGeneral 1-year mortality: Con-female 8.4%, Con-male 15.3%, HF-female 24.6%, HF-male 33.3%, p<0.0001 (log rank). SHPT AND RELATED 1-YEAR MORTALITY: Con-no SHPT 8.9%, Con-SHPT 16.8%, HF-no SHPT 22.7%, HF-SHPT 34.9%, p<0.0001 (log rank). The mortality rates were higher for controls with SHPT (OR 2.06, 95% CI: 1.32-3.23), hip fracture patients without SHPT (OR 3.00, 95% CI: 2.14-4.20) and hip fracture patients with SHPT (OR 5.46, 95% CI: 3.32-8.97) compared to the controls without SHPT. PREVALENCE OF SHPT: Con 16%, HF 20%, p=0.09 (Chi-square).nnnCONCLUSIONSnOur study clearly shows that SHPT is significantly associated with mortality in both hip fracture patients and the control group. In the multivariate Cox regression analysis, s-PTH and s-total calcium were both significantly associated with mortality, whereas s-25(OH)D was not associated with mortality in this analysis. Our study furthermore indicates that SHPT is almost equally prevalent amongst the hip fracture patients and the control group.
Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 1987
Duus Br; Peter Damm; Frank U. Jensen; Jack Hoffmann
Two cases of abdominal stab wounds with omental protrusion treated conservatively are presented. Omental protrusion in a patient without signs of shock or peritoneal irritation is not an absolute indication for explorative laparotomy.
Danish Medical Journal | 2014
Christopher Jantzen; Henrik L. Jørgensen; Morten T. Thomsen; Troels Riis; Bo Sommer; Duus Br; Jes Bruun Lauritzen
Orthopaedic Proceedings | 2012
Susanne van der Mark; Sune Jauffred; Henrik Joergensen; Troels Riis; Henning Ogarrio; Duus Br
Acta chirurgica Scandinavica | 1986
Duus Br; Hauch O; Peter Damm; Jack Hoffmann
ECTS-IBMS2015 | 2015
Debbie Norring-Agerskov; Adbu Mohamed; Henrik L. Jørgensen; Troels Riis; Duus Br; Jes Bruun Lauritzen; Jesper Jorgen Hvolris
Orthopaedic Proceedings | 2012
Mathias Mosfeldt; Ole Pedersen; Henrik L. Jørgensen; Henning Ogarrio; Duus Br; Jes Bruun Lauritzen