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Dive into the research topics where Harald Tscherne is active.

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Featured researches published by Harald Tscherne.


Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 1997

Minimally invasive percutaneous plate osteosynthesis (MIPPO) using the DCS in proximal and distal femoral fractures

C. Krettek; P. Schandelmaier; T. Nliclau; Harald Tscherne

In a prospective study, 14 cases of supracondylar or subtrochanteric fractures or osteotomies were stabilized with a dynamic condylar screw (DCS) inserted using a minimally invasive percutaneous plate osteosynthesis (MIPPO) technique. The technique consisted of 4 major steps: 1) placement of the guide wire under fluoroscopic control and condylar screw insertion through a stab incision; 2) plate insertion beneath the vastus lateral muscle; 3) engagement of the condylar screw to the plate using a modified T-handle and, 4) plate fixation to the shaft using percutaneously inserted self-cutting screws. Between October 1994 and December 1995, 14 cases in 12 patients met the inclusion criteria. There were 11 acute fractures (6 subtrochanteric, 5 supracondylar) and 3 corrective osteotomies. Nine fractures were closed, and 2 were open. One 97-year-old patient died 6 weeks after trauma. There were no infections and 12 of 13 cases healed without a second procedure. There was 1 implant failure (plate screw breakage), which required repeat fracture fixation. At follow-up, there were 2 varus deformities above 5 degrees, 2 shortenings over 20 mm, and 1 rotational deformity of 20 degrees. According to the Neer score, there were 6 excellent, 1 satisfactory, 3 unsatisfactory results and no failures. The results of this technique compare favourably with those of other series of osteosynthesis of subtrochanteric or supracondylar femoral fractures treated with internal fixation without the added morbidity associated with an extensive approach or autogenous bone grafting. However, the surgical technique is demanding, and care must be taken to restore the axial alignment.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1995

Treatment Results of Patients with Multiple Trauma: An Analysis of 3406 Cases Treated between 1972 and 1991 at a German Level I Trauma Center

G. Regel; Lobenhoffer P; M. Grotz; Hans Christoph Pape; Lehmann U; Harald Tscherne

The quality and progress of treatment for 3406 multiple trauma patients was reviewed retrospectively. Two periods (1972 to 1981, the first decade, and 1982 to 1991, the second decade) were compared. Sixty-nine percent of patients with multiple trauma had cerebral injuries, 62% thoracic trauma, and 86% fractures (40% open fractures). Concerning injury combinations, there was an increase of head/extremity injuries and thoracic/extremity injuries, whereas all combinations with abdominal injuries decreased. The relation between severity of injury as well as number of injured body regions and the mortality rate was significant. In the second decade prehospital care became more aggressive with an increase in use of intravenous fluid resuscitation (from 80% to 98%), intubation (from 84% to 91%), and chest tube insertion (from 37% to 76%). Rescue times were progressively shortened. For initial clinical diagnosis of massive abdominal hemorrhage, ultrasound (89%) nearly replaced peritoneal lavage (10%) and led to earlier surgical approach. For diagnosis of head injury, CT scan was used more frequently. Primary stabilization of long bone fractures, especially of the lower limb, is recommended. Concerning complications, the change in volume therapy helped to nearly eliminate acute renal failure (from 8.4% to 3.7%), the modification of respirator treatment led to a decrease of pulmonary insufficiency (ARDS; from 18.2% to 12.0%), whereas the rate of multiple organ failure increased. The mortality rate declined from 37% in the first decade to 22% in the second decade. The incidence of lethal multiple organ failure increased from 13.8% in the first decade to 18.6% in the second decade, whereas the mortality rate of ARDS decreased from 32.4% to 15.9%. Further reduction of incidents of death is only possible with causal therapy of posttraumatic organ failure immediately after injury.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1994

The Hannover experience in management of pelvic fractures

Tim Pohlemann; Bosch U; Gänsslen A; Harald Tscherne

Between 1972 and 1993, 1899 patients with fractures of the pelvis were treated at the authors institution. The pelvic ring was fractured in 1479 patients, and 1029 sustained polytrauma. A retrospective study included four parts: (1) Demographic analysis of 1409 patients showed an increase in the severity of pelvic and general trauma during this period. The 17.7% mortality rate was predicted by the Hannover Polytrauma Score and associated extrapelvic blunt trauma. (2) Residual displacement after operative treatment of the pelvis was analyzed in 221 patients. In C type (Tile) fractures residual displacement correlated with external fixation and solely anterior stabilization. (3) Outcome after operative treatment was analyzed in a consecutive series of 58 patients an average of 2.2 years after trauma. Pelvic pain was frequent (Type B 11%, Type C 66%) and correlated with posterior displacement over 5 mm and primary neurological injuries. (4) Mortality after complex pelvic trauma (pelvic fracture with soft tissue injury) decreased from 48.1% to 29.6% during these years. Standardized protocols for primary care and operative procedures of pelvic injuries optimize therapy. Complex pelvic trauma requires early, aggressive surgical management with surgical hemostasis. Further developments in open reduction and internal fixation of the pelvis focus on minimizing additional soft tissue trauma and implants.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1992

Blunt abdominal trauma in cases of multiple trauma evaluated by ultrasonography: a prospective analysis of 291 patients.

Reinhard Hoffmann; Michael Nerlich; Michael Muggia-sullam; Tim Pohlemann; Wippermann B; G. Regel; Harald Tscherne

Early recognition of blunt abdominal trauma in patients with multiple injuries and in shock is of utmost importance and calls for a rapid screening method. The reliability of diagnostic ultrasonography in detecting hemoperitoneum in patients with multiple trauma was evaluated prospectively. From 1986 to 1990, 291 patients with severe multiple injuries (ISS greater than 20, mean ISS 31.2) were included in the study. Laparotomy was performed on 117 patients (40%). Initial ultrasound (US) findings showed a sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 89%, 97%, and 94%, respectively, in detecting intra-abdominal injuries requiring surgical repair. The positive and negative predictive values were 94% and 95%, respectively. A standardized management of frequent repeat US studies can even improve on these numbers. In our department ultrasonography has replaced diagnostic peritoneal lavage (DPL) as the diagnostic study of first choice. Diagnostic peritoneal lavage is reserved for selected cases only.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1993

Osteosynthesis of displaced intraarticular fractures of the calcaneus. Results in 123 cases.

Hans Zwipp; Harald Tscherne; Hajo Thermann; Theresa Weber

The operative treatment of intraarticular calcaneal fractures has three principal aims: restoration of height, length, and width of the calcaneus, reconstruction of the subtalar and calcaneocuboid joint surfaces, and stable osteosynthesis using an H-plate or screws. In 68% of the cases, the sustentacular fragment was the key to open reduction, making the medial approach mandatory. In complex fractures, a lateral approach is added. In “blow-out” fractures or cases with comminution of the sustentacular fragment, an extended lateral approach only is used. For precise preoperative planning of roentgenograms in three planes, four Brodens views and axial plus coroneal or three-dimensional computed tomography scans are required. From July 1983 to July 1990, 157 intraarticular calcaneal fractures were treated by open reduction. The results in 123 cases are 61% good or excellent, 32.5% satisfactory, and 6.5% poor. The following early complications occurred: superficial wound edge necrosis (8.3%), hematoma (2.5%), nonunion (1.3%), and infection (1.9%). Four patients (3.3%) in the follow-up group have developed degenerative changes severe enough to require subtalar fusion. To facilitate the comparison of results, new fracture classification and follow-up scoring systems have been devised.


Critical Care Medicine | 2000

Biochemical changes after trauma and skeletal surgery of the lower extremity: quantification of the operative burden.

Hans-Christoph Pape; Reinhold E. Schmidt; John Rice; Martijn van Griensven; Ronjan Das Gupta; Christian Krettek; Harald Tscherne

OBJECTIVE To quantify changes in variables of inflammation, coagulation, and fibrinolysis in blunt trauma patients with lower extremity fractures who underwent different types of surgical procedures. DESIGN Prospective, cohort study. SETTING Level I university trauma center. PATIENTS We allocated 83 blunt trauma patients in stable condition and 22 patients eligible for elective hip replacement to four treatment groups. INTERVENTIONS In 34 multiply traumatized patients with femoral fracture (group PTFF) and in 28 patients with an isolated femoral fracture (group IFF), primary unreamed intramedullary nailing for stabilization of the femoral shaft fracture was performed. In 22 patients, an elective uncemented total hip arthroplasty (group THA) was inserted for osteoarthritis, and in 21 control patients, an isolated ankle fracture (group AF) was acutely stabilized. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS From serially sampled central venous blood, the perioperative concentrations of interleukin (IL)-6, of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, of prothrombin fragments 1 + 2, and of D-dimer cross-linked fibrin degradation products were evaluated. Intramedullary instrumentation for an isolated femur fracture caused a significant perioperative increase in the concentrations of IL-6 (preoperative IL-6, 52 +/- 12 pg/mL; IL-6 30 mins postinsertion, 78 +/- 14 pg/mL; p = .02). This increase was comparable with group THA (preoperative IL-6, 46 +/- 16 pg/mL; IL-6 30 mins postinsertion, 67 +/- 11 pg/mL; p = .03). A positive correlation occurred between both groups (r = .83, p < .0004). Multiple trauma patients demonstrated significantly (p = .0002) higher IL-6 concentrations than all other groups throughout the study period and showed a significant increase after femoral nailing (preoperative IL-6, 570 +/- 21 pg/mL; IL-6 30 mins postinsertion, 690 +/- 24 pg/mL; p = .003), whereas no perioperative change was seen in group AF. The highest IL-6 increases were associated with a longer ventilation time (group PTFF) and a longer period of positive fluid balances (groups PTFF, IFF, THA). The coagulatory variables demonstrated similar perioperative increases in groups IFF and THA, but not in groups PTFF and AF. The IL-6 concentrations and the prothrombin fragments 1 + 2 concentrations correlated between groups THA and IFF at 30 mins and at 1 hr after surgery (r2 = .64, p < .02). In all patients the clinical variables were stable perioperatively. CONCLUSIONS Major surgery of the lower extremity causes changes to the inflammatory, fibrinolytic, and coagulatory cascades in patients with stable cardiopulmonary function. The inflammatory response induced by femoral nailing is biochemically comparable to that induced by uncemented total hip arthroplasty. In multiple trauma patients, increases, which occurred in addition to those induced by the initial trauma, were measured. Definitive primary femoral stabilization by intramedullary nailing imposes an additional burden to the patient with blunt trauma. A careful preoperative investigation is required to evaluate whether primary definitive stabilization can be performed safely.


World Journal of Surgery | 1996

Pattern of organ failure following severe trauma

G. Regel; M. Grotz; Tobias Weltner; Johannes A. Sturm; Harald Tscherne

Abstract. Multiple organ failure (MOF) is considered to be the leading cause of death after severe trauma. Although there is extensive literature on MOF, little is known about the pattern, sequence, and onset of this clinical syndrome. The first goal of this clinical study was to define MOF; the second was to assess the typical onset, sequence, and pattern of MOF; and the third was to define certain risk factors for the development of MOF in 342 multiple trauma patients. Patients with an Injury Severity Score (ISS): > 20 (mean 35.7) were included. Three well established MOF scoring methods were used to give strict definitions of MOF: 11.4% of the total patient population developed MOF, and 88.6% did not. Respiratory failure was most frequent in patients developing MOF (74.4%), and these patients had the highest mortality rate (65.5%) compared to patients with failure of other organ systems (liver, cardiovascular system). Generally, the lung is the first organ to fail after injury (failure after 3.7 ± 2.8 days). Significant renal failure and the need for dialysis decreased to < 5%; other signs of organ dysfunction (gastric, central nervous system) are difficult to verify. Typical risk factors for the development of MOF after severe trauma are the severity, type, and distribution of injury as well as the indicators of prolonged hemorrhagic shock (elevated lactate levels). The main therapeutic efforts, therefore, should be the effective treatment of traumatic hemorrhagic shock during the initial phase, adequate resuscitation, optimal oxygenation, and early surgical treatment.


Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery | 1998

Outcome after primary and secondary hemiarthroplasty in elderly patients with fractures of the proximal humerus

Ulrich Bosch; Michael Skutek; R. W. Fremerey; Harald Tscherne

Thirty-nine consecutive patients with 3- and 4-part proximal humeral fractures and fracture dislocations were treated with hemiarthroplasty. After an average of 42 months (range 5 to 98 months) of follow-up, 17 women and 8 men (average age 64.5 years) were evaluated with the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) scale, the Constant-Murley scale, the Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) scale, and the visual analogue scale. Fair, good, or excellent results were achieved in 80% of the patients on the UCLA and Visual scales, in 72% of the patients on the HSS scale, and in 44% of the patients on the Constant-Murley scale. The highest correlation was between the HSS score and the Visual analogue score. According to the UCLA and Constant-Murley results, the outcome after early (<4 weeks) humeral head replacement was significantly better than after late (> or =4 weeks) humeral head replacement (UCLA score, P=.02; Constant-Murley score, P=.01). After early hemiarthroplasty active forward flexion was significantly better (P=.035). Thus the decision to perform prosthetic humeral head replacement in elderly patients should be made as early as possible after trauma.


Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma | 1999

The mechanical effect of blocking screws ("Poller screws") in stabilizing tibia fractures with short proximal or distal fragments after insertion of small-diameter intramedullary nails.

Christian Krettek; Theodore Miclau; P. Schandelmaier; Christine Stephan; Urs Möhlmann; Harald Tscherne

OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS To evaluate the mechanical effects of medial and lateral blocking screws in supplementing intramedullary nail fixation of high proximal and low distal tibial fractures treated with small-diameter intramedullary nails. STUDY DESIGN Intact fresh human cadaveric tibiae were sectioned to provide ten distal segments measuring seventy millimeters and ten proximal segments measuring ninety millimeters. In the distal segments, stainless steel solid eight-millimeter tibial nails were advanced to eight millimeters from the ankle joint. Two transverse and one anterior-posterior (AP) locking screw were inserted using a custom-made jig. The same jig was used for the placement of a medial and a lateral blocking screw (BS) in the AP direction, nine millimeters above the superior most interlocking screw and eight millimeters distal to the lower end of the segment. In the proximal segments, two interlocking screws (both static and dynamic screws) were placed in a medial-lateral direction with the use of the insertion handle. A jig was used for placement of a medial and a lateral BS in the AP direction, nine millimeters below the lower transverse interlocking screw and sixteen millimeters proximal to the lower end of the segment. The bone-implant construct (BIC) was embedded and fixed in a materials testing machine. The BICs were loaded in the medial-lateral direction at a distance of 185 millimeters from the nail ends with loads from -150 newtons to + 150 newtons. Force-displacement curves were recorded before and after insertion of the BSs. RESULTS In proximal BICs, the addition of BSs decreased the deformation of the BICs 25 percent, from 8.9 +/- 1.9 degrees [mean +/- standard deviation (SD)] in the control group to 6.8 +/-1.1 degrees in the BS group (mean +/- SD) (p < 0.0001). In distal BICs, the addition of BSs decreased the deformation of the BICs 57 percent, from 9.5 +/- 1.4 degrees (mean +/- SD) in the control group to 4.0 +/- 1.0 degrees in the BS group (mean +/- SD) (p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS The study suggests that medial and lateral blocking screws can increase the primary stability of distal and proximal metaphyseal fractures after nailing and can be an effective tool for selected cases that exhibit malalignment and/or instability.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1992

Pulmonary damage after intramedullary femoral nailing in traumatized sheep--is there an effect from different nailing methods?

Hans Christoph Pape; A. Dwenger; Q. Regel; G. Schweitzer; M. Jonas; D. Remmers; K. Krumm; C. Neumann; Johannes A. Sturm; Harald Tscherne

Stabilization of femoral shaft fractures is a controversial issue in the management of patients with multiple trauma. Intramedullary nailing usually is preferred primarily; in recent years, however, pulmonary complications (e.g., ARDS) have been reported that were attributed to the reaming procedure. To study the effects of different nailing methods in a model of severe trauma, hemorrhagic shock and lung contusion were created at day 1 in sheep prepared by the method described by Staub. After recuperation (day 3) the animals in the study group (group 1) underwent intramedullary nailing of a closed femur without prior reaming; group 2 was treated with reaming and nailing according to AO standards. The reaming procedure led to an acute increase of pulmonary arterial pressure only in group 2 (19.8 +/- 2.1 to 31.0 +/- 4.6 mm Hg). Pulmonary triglyceride levels increased at parallel time points from 18.27 +/- 2.3 to 33.04 +/- 7.37 mg/dL only in group 2. Stimulatory capacity of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL) increased in the study group and decreased in controls (group 1: 2.652 +/- 0.23 x 10(6) cpm to 3.387 +/- 1.34 x 10(6) cpm; group 2: 2.699 +/- 0.34 x 10(6) cpm to 2.460 +/- 0.187 x 10(6) cpm). Intramedullary nailing caused an increase of lung capillary permeability in both groups; in the study group less damage was seen (group 1: 0.390 +/- 0.0006 to 0.354 +/- 0.011; group 2: 0.391 +/- 0.0004 to 0.336 +/- 0.015; p < 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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C. Krettek

Hannover Medical School

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M. Grotz

Hannover Medical School

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Ulrich Bosch

Hannover Medical School

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