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Damage Control Orthopaedics

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If the patient is in the OR for lifesaving surgery - do something ... Unstable resuscitation and/or labile CHI. IM NAIL. FAVORABLE. Assess Condition Intra-op ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Damage Control Orthopaedics


1
Damage ControlOrthopaedics
  • Michael J. Bosse, MD
  • Lisa Cannada, MD
  • Robert Hymes, MD
  • John Morris, MD

2
Damage Control
  • Most misunderstood concept of the decade.
  • Simply stated
  • If the patient is in the OR for lifesaving
    surgery - do something for open and long bone
    fractures
  • If not in the OR, delay until physiology is
    correct
  • Protect the brain

3
Key Orthopaedic Issues
  • Do you need to operate ?
  • When do you need to operate ?
  • How much surgery is required ?

4
Early Fracture fixation
  • 2 wks
  • 48 hrs
  • 24 hrs

5
Early Fracture Fixation
  • 1977 - Riska
  • 1980 - LaDuca
  • 1982 - Goris
  • 1985 - Johnson
  • 1985 - Seibel
  • 1989 - Meek
  • 1989 - Bone
  • 1990 - Behman
  • 1990 - Chapman
  • 1993 - Riemer
  • 1994 - Bone
  • 1994 - Charash

6
12 Articles
  • Only one prospective randomized
  • None were designed to account for
  • patient or injury variability
  • advances in the treatment of the CHI
  • advances made in pre-hospital, resuscitative and
    critical care

7
Worst Study, Most Misquoted
  • Bone et al, JBJS - Early v Delayed fixation of
    Femur Fractures
  • Not appropriately randomized
  • Cohorts too small
  • Only significant finding was total cost of care

THE ORTHO SILVER BULLET !
8
Johnson et al , 1985
  • 132 patients, retrospective
  • ISS gt 18
  • 5X ARDS rate if surgery delayed gt 24hrs

Reported from a Center that employed an early
fixation protocol
9
Outcomes Analysis
  • Any decade
  • All trauma specialties evolving and refining
  • Combined effect drives decrease in MM
  • No one treatment can be implicated as the cause
    without controlling for the impact of the others!

10
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11
Early Fixation Gives
Orthopaedic Trauma Surgeon Beliefs
  • Less ventilator days
  • Less ICU days
  • Reduced MOF and Sepsis rates
  • Reduced ARDS and FE rates
  • Less fracture complications
  • Decreased hospital stay cost
  • Decreased mortality
  • Improved outcome
  • Easier patient care
  • Decreased decubitus ulcer rates

12
Classic Level I Center
  • Care for the open injuries
  • Fix the long bones
  • Fix the upper extremities
  • Fix whatever was left to fix

Prolonged OR time, excessive blood loss,
temperature drop
13
Religious
Thou Shalt Immediately Nail ALL Long Bone
Fractures !
14
The Eleventh Commandment
DOGMA
15
However,
  • Recognized a group of patients too sick for the
    stresses of major orthopaedic surgery
  • Traveling traction External fixation
  • Andrew Burgess, Baltimore Shock Trauma 1984

16
Damage Control Surgery
  • Rotundo 1993
  • Described early termination of laparotomy after
    control of bleeding and contamination
  • Later definitive care
  • 10 of trauma patients

17
Respect the Critical Triad
  • Hypothermia
  • Coagulopathy
  • Acidosis

18
Unfavorable Surgical Parameters
  • Progressive hypoxia
  • Unremitting metabolic acidosis
  • Mixed venous desaturation
  • Hypothermia
  • Uncorrected coagulopathy

19
Pape - 1993
  • Critically ill patients with pulmonary contusions
    and femur fractures did better with delayed
    treatment

J Trauma 34 (1993) 540
20
Reynolds - 1995
  • 424 Femur fractures
  • 105 ISS gt 18
  • No rigid early fixation protocol
  • stable patients - immediate ORIF
  • unstable patients - delayed surgery

21
Reynolds - 1995
  • Pulmonary outcomes not related to early or late
    fixation
  • Pulmonary outcome was related to the severity of
    the injury

22
Polytrauma Patient fracture
Stable
Borderline
Unstable
In extremis
If in shock/or need chest decompression
hypoxia, urine output, and IL-6
Stable
Uncertain
OR for ETC
OR for DCO
Pape AJSurg 183 2002
23
Polytrauma Patient fracture
Stable
Borderline
Unstable
In extremis
If in shock/or need chest decompression
hypoxia, urine output, and IL-6
Stable
Uncertain
OR for ETC
OR for DCO
Pape AJSurg 183 2002
24
TBI Goals
  • Oxygenation
  • Ventilation
  • Restoration of Circulating Volume
  • Blood Pressure
  • ?ICP

25
Unstable patient with a femur fracture
In MOR for life-saving surgery
Responds to Resuscitation
Unstable resuscitation and/or labile CHI
Skeletal Traction
Assess Condition Intra-op
Aggressive Resuscitation in ICU and monitor CHI
FAVORABLE

_
IM NAIL
Parameters Favorable
_

Provisional Ex Fixation
Provisional Ex Fixation (_at_ 3-4 days)
Convert to IM Nail when patients condition allows
26
Delayed Femur Fixation Reduces Mortality in the
MIP
  • Retrospective study of NTDB
  • 3069 pts femur fxs and ISS gt 15
  • Determine 12 hrs was the cut point
  • Delay beyond 12 hrs 50 reduction in mortality
  • Pts with serious abdominal trauma benefit most
  • Likely related to patients resuscitation
  • Supports delayed fixation Damage Control

Morshed, JBJS 2009
27
Taeger DCO Germany
  • 75/409 (18) patients with ISS gt 30 and major
    orthopaedic injuries treated with DCO
  • 135 fractures 49 femurs 39 tibias 25 pelvic
    and 22 upper extremity
  • 73 were closed
  • 85 in the OR for DCO
  • 14 laps, 13 craniotomies, 2 compartments
  • Concluded that DCO reduced initial OR time

Out of Control Damage Control
28
Damage Control
  • Isolated Trauma
  • May have NO functional or positive clinical
    effect
  • Likely increases cost of care
  • Increased implant cost (ex fix)
  • Increased OR exposure
  • Increased LOS

Ortho Hype
29
Damage Control
  • Traction pins, ER washouts and splints ARE Damage
    Control

30
Damage Control
  • Simply stated
  • If the patient is in the OR for lifesaving
    surgery - do something for open and long bone
    fractures
  • If not in the OR, delay until physiology is
    correct
  • Protect the brain

31
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32
Case 1
  • 34 yo male MVC
  • Segmental Femur Fx open
  • Open ankle
  • BE -4
  • LOC, nl CT , GCS 14

33
Case 2
  • 26 yo male, MCC
  • AIREVAC
  • Airway / pneumothorax
  • BPsystoliclt90
  • LOC GCS 9
  • Open Tibia
  • Femur
  • Pelvic Fx

34
On Admission
  • Intubated
  • Chest tubes
  • HR 130
  • FAST (-)
  • BE -9
  • Scrotal hematoma
  • Pelvic instability

35
Immediate Therapy?
36
Work-up / Imaging ?
37
CT - diffuse swelling
38
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39
Treatment Plan
40
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41
Timing of Care
42
Case 3
  • 26 yo MVC
  • CHI GCS 7
  • BP gt 90
  • Pulse 100
  • BE -2

43
Other Injuries
  • Femur Fx (segmental)
  • Open BBFA
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