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Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2007

Prevention of Perioperative Infection

Nicholas Fletcher; DʼMitri Sofianos; Marschall B. Berkes; William T. Obremskey

Surgical site infection is one of the most common complications that a surgeon encounters, with an infection occurring after approximately 780,000 operations in the United States each year1. In the era of evidence-based medicine, it is in the best interest of patients and physicians to follow practices backed by basic science and clinical data. Unfortunately, standards of practice, even for the use of prophylactic antibiotics, are frequently not followed2. In 2005, this journal made a commitment to present physicians with the literature to support the best available treatment for their patients with use of “recommendations for care” based on grades of recommendation in review articles3. Grades of recommendation are intended to guide surgeons in determining whether they should change their practice on the basis of good (Grade-A) or fair (Grade-B) recommendations. Grade-A recommendations are generated from Level-I studies, whereas Grade-B recommendations are derived from Level-II or III research. A proposal is considered to be Grade C when there is poor or conflicting evidence concerning an intervention based on Level-IV or V studies, and Grade …


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2010

Maintenance of hardware after early postoperative infection following fracture internal fixation.

Marschall B. Berkes; William T. Obremskey; Brian P. Scannell; J. Kent Ellington; Robert A. Hymes; Michael J. Bosse

BACKGROUND The development of a deep wound infection in the presence of hardware after open reduction and internal fixation presents a clinical dilemma, and there is scant literature to aid in decision-making. The purpose of the present study was to determine the prevalence of osseous union with maintenance of hardware after the development of postoperative infection within six weeks after internal fixation of a fracture. METHODS The present study included 121 patients from three level-I trauma centers, retrospectively identified from billing and trauma registries, in whom 123 postoperative wound infections with positive intraoperative cultures had developed within six weeks after internal fixation of acute fractures. The incidence of fracture union without hardware removal was calculated, and the parameters that predicted success or failure were evaluated. RESULTS Eighty-six patients (eighty-seven fractures; 71%) had fracture union with operative débridement, retention of hardware, and culture-specific antibiotic treatment and suppression. Predictors of treatment failure were open fracture (p = 0.03) and the presence of an intramedullary nail (p = 0.01). Several variables were not significant but trended toward an association with failure, including smoking, infection with Pseudomonas species, and involvement of the femur, tibia, ankle, or foot. CONCLUSIONS Deep infection after internal fixation of a fracture can be treated successfully with operative débridement, antibiotic suppression, and retention of hardware until fracture union occurs. These results may be improved by patient selection based on certain risk factors and the specific bacteria and implants involved.


Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma | 2012

Catastrophic failure after open reduction internal fixation of femoral neck fractures with a novel locking plate implant.

Marschall B. Berkes; Milton T. M. Little; Lionel E. Lazaro; Rachel M. Cymerman; David L. Helfet; Dean G. Lorich

Objectives: To determine if the use of a novel proximal femoral locking plate could reduce the incidence of femoral neck shortening and improve clinical outcomes after open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) for femoral neck fractures as compared with historical controls. Design: Single surgeon, retrospective case–control study. Setting: Academic level I trauma center. Patients/Participants: Twenty-one femoral neck fractures treated with the posterolateral femoral locking plate (Synthes, Inc, Paoli, PA) were eligible for inclusion. Eighteen met inclusion/exclusion criteria with a mean follow-up of 16 months. Intervention: ORIF of femoral neck fracture with the posterolateral femoral locking plate. This consists of a side plate with multiple locking screws directed into the femoral head at converging/diverging angles and a single shaft screw. Intraoperative compression was achieved with partially threaded screws before locking screw insertion. Main Outcome Measurements: Maintenance of reduction was assessed by comparing immediate postoperative and final follow-up radiographs. Clinical outcome was assessed with Harris Hip Scores after 1 year. Complications and secondary operations were noted. Results: Seven (36.8%) of 18 patients experienced catastrophic failure. Five of these patients required total hip replacement, whereas the remaining 2 died before further treatment. The remaining 11 patients (61.1%) achieved bony union; the average displacement of the center of the head did not differ when compared with historical controls (0.78 mm inferiorly, 1.62 mm medially, and 2.4 degrees of increased varus vs. 0.86 mm, 1.23 mm, and 0.6 degree). Complications in this group include 1 instance of screw fracture, 2 total hip replacements, and a peri-implant subtrochanteric femur fracture. The average patient age and proportion of displaced fractures did not differ between the historical control and experimental groups. Fracture displacement was strongly associated with catastrophic failure in the experimental group only. Average Harris Hip Scores was significantly worse compared with that of historical controls (67.9 vs. 84.7, P = 0.05). Conclusions: ORIF of femoral neck fractures using a locking plate construct yielded unacceptably poor outcomes in this patient population. We hypothesize that the stiffness of this construct prevents any fracture site micromotion, placing the mechanical burden on the implant, which can result in failure at the bone–screw interface or fatigue failure of the implant itself. Level of Evidence: Therapeutic Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2013

Articular Congruity Is Associated with Short-Term Clinical Outcomes of Operatively Treated SER IV Ankle Fractures

Marschall B. Berkes; Milton T. M. Little; Lionel E. Lazaro; Nadine C. Pardee; Patrick C. Schottel; David L. Helfet; Dean G. Lorich

BACKGROUND With regard to supination-external rotation type-IV (SER IV) ankle fractures, there is no consensus regarding which patient, injury, and treatment variables most strongly influence clinical outcome. The purpose of this investigation was to examine the impact of articular surface congruity on the functional outcomes of operatively treatment of SER IV ankle fractures. METHODS A prospectively generated database consisting of operatively treated SER IV ankle fractures was reviewed. Postoperative computed tomography (CT) scans were used to assess ankle joint congruity. Ankles were considered incongruent in the presence of >2 mm of articular step-off, intra-articular loose bodies, or an articular surface gap of >2 mm (despite an otherwise anatomic reduction) due to joint impaction and comminution. Patients with at least one year of clinical follow-up were eligible for analysis. The primary and secondary outcome measures were the Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS) and ankle motion. RESULTS One hundred and eight SER IV fractures met our inclusion criteria. The average duration of follow-up was twenty-one months. Seventy-two patients (67%) had a congruent ankle joint, and thirty-six (33%) had elements of articular surface incongruity on postoperative CT scanning. These two groups were similar with regard to comorbidities and injury and treatment variables. At the time of the final follow-up, the group with articular incongruity had a significantly worse FAOS with regard to symptoms (p = 0.012), pain (p = 0.004), and activities of daily living (p = 0.038). Those with articular incongruity had worse average scores in the FAOS sport domain as well. No significant differences in ankle motion were found between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS In this population of patients with an operatively treated SER IV ankle fracture, the presence of postoperative articular incongruity correlated with inferior early clinical outcomes. Orthopaedic surgeons should scrutinize ankle fracture reductions and strive for perfection to allow for the best possible clinical outcome. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Therapeutic Level IV. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2013

Outcomes After Operative Fixation of Complete Articular Patellar Fractures: Assessment of Functional Impairment

Lionel E. Lazaro; David S. Wellman; Gina Sauro; Nadine C. Pardee; Marschall B. Berkes; Milton T. M. Little; Joseph Nguyen; David L. Helfet; Dean G. Lorich

BACKGROUND Patellar fractures are debilitating injuries that compromise the knee extensor mechanism and are frequently associated with poor outcomes. The purpose of this study was to quantify the functional outcomes of operative treatment of patellar fractures. METHODS Functional outcome data on thirty patients with an isolated unilateral patellar fracture were prospectively obtained at three, six, and twelve months postoperatively. RESULTS All fractures healed. There were two complications (7%) related to the surgery (wound dehiscence and refracture), and eleven patients (37%) underwent removal of symptomatic implants. The tibial plateau-patella angle demonstrated patella baja in seventeen (57%) of the patients. Anterior knee pain during activities of daily living was experienced by twenty-four (80%) of the patients. Clinical improvement occurred over the first six months. However, functional impairment persisted at twelve months, with objective testing demonstrating that the knee extensor mechanism on the injured side had deficits in strength (-41%), power (-47%), and endurance (-34%) as compared with the uninjured side. CONCLUSIONS Despite advances in surgical protocols and acceptable radiographic outcomes, functional impairment remains common after treatment of patellar fractures. Rehabilitation strategies following surgical stabilization of these injuries will be a fruitful area for future clinical research.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2012

Meta-analysis of re-operation, nonunion, and infection after open reduction and internal fixation of patella fractures.

Christopher J. Dy; Milton T. M. Little; Marschall B. Berkes; Yan Ma; Timothy R. Roberts; David L. Helfet; Dean G. Lorich

BACKGROUND The subcutaneous location of the patella and the demand for early knee motion contribute to the difficulty in treating patients with patella fractures. The reported rates in the literature for hardware removal after patella open reduction and internal fixation range from 0% to 60%. The wide variability of these reports leaves the true frequency of re-operation and complications after patella open reduction and internal fixation in question. Furthermore, gaining a better understanding of the factors that contribute to re-operation and complications will help to generate hypotheses and research agendas to address these difficult problems. METHODS We performed a systematic review to identify publications in which adult patients with patella fractures were surgically treated with a minimum of 6-month follow-up. The surgical technique (tension band or other), infection rate, nonunion rate, and re-operation rate (including removal of hardware) were recorded. Meta-regression analysis was used to describe the potential contributory factors for re-operation, nonunion, and infection while controlling for age, gender, open fracture, surgical technique, and date of publication. Separate regression models were constructed for each outcome depending on the number of studies available for inclusion. RESULTS The frequency of re-operation was 33.6% in a meta-analysis of 24 studies (737 patella fractures). The frequency of infection was 3.2% in a meta-analysis of 18 studies (522 patella fractures). The frequency of nonunion was 1.3% in a meta-analysis of 15 studies (464 patella fractures). There were no significant predictors for re-operation, nonunion, or infection in any of the regression analyses. CONCLUSION Although the frequencies of nonunion and infection are relatively low after surgical treatment of patella fractures, the modern rate of re-operation is substantial. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Meta-analysis, level III+.


Foot & Ankle International | 2013

Complications Following Treatment of Supination External Rotation Ankle Fractures Through the Posterolateral Approach

Milton T. M. Little; Marschall B. Berkes; Lionel E. Lazaro; Peter K. Sculco; David L. Helfet; Dean G. Lorich

Background: The posterolateral approach to the ankle is a valuable approach for the treatment of ankle fractures (SER) ankle fractures. The purpose of this study was to determine the complication rate for ankle fractures treated through the posterolateral approach. We hypothesized that this approach would be associated with a low incidence of complications and good clinical outcomes. Methods: A total of 112 patients with SER ankle fractures treated through a posterolateral approach met inclusion criteria. Prospectively collected data were examined retrospectively from chart review, preoperative plain radiographs, and MRI as well as postoperative radiographs. The mean age was 51.5 (range, 18 to 86) years. The primary outcome of the study was major (surgical debridement, flap, or split thickness skin graft) and minor (epidermolysis requiring local wound care) wound complications. The secondary outcomes included infection, symptomatic hardware, reoperation, loss of reduction, malreduction, nonunion, Foot and Ankle Outcome Scores, range of motion, and other perioperative complications. Results: There were 11 minor wound related complications (9.8%) and 3 major wound complications (2.7%), 1 of which required a split thickness skin graft. The overall postoperative wound infection rate was 4.4% (5 of 112); 2 patients required hardware removal due to deep infection. Of patients, 7% (8 of 112) reported symptomatic lateral sided hardware and thus underwent removal of implants. The overall reoperation rate was 12.5%. The complication rate was 23%. No patients experienced loss of reduction. Conclusions: The posterolateral approach to the ankle was a valuable approach for SER ankle fractures. This series demonstrated many key aspects of this approach including access to the apex of the fibula fracture for posterior antiglide plating, access to the posterior malleolus for fixation, access to the posterior inferior tibiofibular ligament for repair, minimal major wound complications, good functional outcomes, and minimal need for reoperation. Level of Evidence: Level IV, retrospective evaluation of prospectively collected data.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2013

Quantitative and qualitative assessment of bone perfusion and arterial contributions in a patellar fracture model using gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging: a cadaveric study.

Lionel E. Lazaro; David S. Wellman; Craig E. Klinger; Jonathan P. Dyke; Nadine C. Pardee; Peter K. Sculco; Marschall B. Berkes; David L. Helfet; Dean G. Lorich

BACKGROUND The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the anatomy and contribution of the patellar vascular supply and to quantify the effect of a transverse fracture on patellar perfusion. METHODS In twenty matched pairs of fresh-frozen cadaveric knees, the superficial femoral artery, anterior tibialis artery, and posterior tibialis artery were cannulated. One side of each matched pair was randomly selected to undergo one of two osteotomies: (1) midpatellar osteotomy or (2) distal-pole osteotomy. For volumetric analysis, comparisons were performed between contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance images and precontrast magnetic resonance images as well as between osteotomized patellar bone fragments and the corresponding intact areas on the control side. We then injected a urethane polymer compound and dissected all specimens to examine extraosseous vascularity. RESULTS Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated that the largest arterial contribution to the patella entered at the inferior pole in 100% of the specimens; in 80% of these specimens, the artery entered inferomedially. It also revealed an overall decrease in contrast enhancement in both transverse osteotomy groups, with an average reduction in enhancement in the proximal fragment of 36%. CONCLUSIONS If possible, surgical interventions about the knee should be carefully planned to preserve the peripatellar ring (the source of the entire patellar blood supply), especially the inferior patellar network. Distal-pole patellectomy should be avoided to retain vascularized bone at the reduced fracture site.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2012

Malleolar fractures and their ligamentous injury equivalents have similar outcomes in supination-external rotation type IV fractures of the ankle treated by anatomical internal fixation

Marschall B. Berkes; Milton T. M. Little; L. E. Lazaro; Peter K. Sculco; R. M. Cymerman; M. Daigl; David L. Helfet; Dean G. Lorich

It has previously been suggested that among unstable ankle fractures, the presence of a malleolar fracture is associated with a worse outcome than a corresponding ligamentous injury. However, previous studies have included heterogeneous groups of injury. The purpose of this study was to determine whether any specific pattern of bony and/or ligamentous injury among a series of supination-external rotation type IV (SER IV) ankle fractures treated with anatomical fixation was associated with a worse outcome. We analysed a prospective cohort of 108 SER IV ankle fractures with a follow-up of one year. Pre-operative radiographs and MRIs were undertaken to characterise precisely the pattern of injury. Operative treatment included fixation of all malleolar fractures. Post-operative CT was used to assess reduction. The primary and secondary outcome measures were the Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS) and the range of movement of the ankle. There were no clinically relevant differences between the four possible SER IV fracture pattern groups with regard to the FAOS or range of movement. In this population of strictly defined SER IV ankle injuries, the presence of a malleolar fracture was not associated with a significantly worse clinical outcome than its ligamentous injury counterpart. Other factors inherent to the injury and treatment may play a more important role in predicting outcome.


Foot & Ankle International | 2014

Comparison of Clinical Outcome of Pronation External Rotation versus Supination External Rotation Ankle Fractures

Patrick C. Schottel; Marschall B. Berkes; Milton T. M. Little; Matthew R. Garner; Peter D. Fabricant; Lionel E. Lazaro; David L. Helfet; Dean G. Lorich

Background: A pronation external rotation (PER) ankle fracture is a relatively uncommon injury. The purpose of this study was to examine the immediate and short-term clinical outcomes of operatively treated PER IV ankle fractures and compare them with a similarly treated cohort of supination external rotation IV (SER IV) fractures. Methods: 22 PER IV and 108 SER IV fractures were identified from a single surgeon’s prospectively collected database from 2004 to 2010. All patients were treated with fracture fragment and ligament specific fixation during the same time period by the same surgeon. Postoperative radiographs and bilateral ankle computed tomography (CT) scans were reviewed for articular incongruity, syndesmotic malreduction, and loss of reduction. Clinical outcome measures, including the Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS) and ankle range of motion (ROM), were collected at latest follow-up visit. Results: There was no difference in the rate of wound complications, fracture nonunion, or loss of reduction between the PER IV and SER IV groups. There was no significant difference in the incidence of postoperative articular incongruity (19% vs 8%, P = .23); however, the PER IV cohort was found to have a significantly higher rate of syndesmotic malreduction (40% vs 18%, P = .04). No clinically or statistically significant differences were detected between the 2 groups in regard to all FAOS domains. Conclusion: In a cohort of operatively treated PER IV fractures, fracture fragment and ligament specific fixation resulted in good short-term outcomes that were comparable to those seen in similarly treated patients with an SER IV fracture pattern. However, a notably greater number of syndesmotic malreductions were noted in the PER IV cohort, and therefore heightened scrutiny is recommended in treating this particular injury pattern. Level of Evidence: Level III, retrospective comparative study.

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Milton T. M. Little

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Dean G. Lorich

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Lionel E. Lazaro

Hospital for Special Surgery

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David L. Helfet

NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital

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Patrick C. Schottel

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Nadine C. Pardee

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Matthew R. Garner

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Joseph Nguyen

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Peter K. Sculco

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Peter D. Fabricant

Hospital for Special Surgery

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