5 research outputs found

    Direct Skeletal Fixation in bilateral above knee amputees following blast: 2 year follow up results from the initial cohort of UK service personnel.

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    AIMS The aim of the study is to evaluate the clinical outcome and complications from the initial cohort of blast injured bilateral lower limb, above knee amputees who underwent Direct Skeletal Fixation (DSF). PATIENTS AND METHODS We undertook a retrospective analysis of a prospective data base identifying patients who had undergone implantation with the Australian Osseointegration Group of Australia-Osseointegration Prosthetic Limb (OGAP-OPL) prosthesis, with minimum 24 months follow up. Patient demographics, injury profile, and polymicrobial colonisation status were recorded. Physical functional performance measures recorded were the 6 minute Walk Test (6-MWT) and patient reported outcome measures were the Short Form Health Survey-36 (SF-36). Post operatively, complications including infection, re-operation, and fracture were recorded. RESULTS 7 patients (14 femora) were identified (mean age 29.8yrs), all injured by dismounted blast. Mean follow up was 46 months. All were polytrauma patients and all had previous polymicrobial colonisation. Following surgery, all patients mobilised with significant improvement in 6-minute walk time, with a mean improvement of 154 m (248 m vs 402 m, p = 0.018). The physical component score for the SF-36 demonstrated a statistically significant improvement from 34.65 to 54.5 (p = 0.018) and the mental component score demonstrated a similar improvement (41.55-58.19 p = 0.018). At follow up, no patient required explantation of the implant. Each had been prescribed a minimum of 1 course of antibiotics with no evidence of deep infection. CONCLUSION DSF is an option for amputees who, due to the nature of their injuries, may not be able to tolerate traditional suspension socket prostheses and have exhausted all other treatment options. At a minimum of 2 year follow up, the absence of significant infective complications suggests DSF may be utilised in the blast injured despite chronic polymicrobial colonisation. Longer term surveillance of these patients is required to assess the long-term suitability of this technique in this cohort of patients

    Shaping the military wound: issues surrounding the reconstruction of injured servicemen at the Royal Centre for Defence Medicine

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    The conflict in Afghanistan has produced injuries similar to those produced from military conflicts for generations. What distinguishes the modern casualty of the conflict in Afghanistan from those of other conflicts is the effectiveness of modern field medical care that has led to individuals surviving with injuries, which would have been immediately fatal even a few years ago. These patients present several challenges to the reconstructive surgeon. These injured individuals present early challenges of massive soft-tissue trauma, unstable physiology, complex bony and soft-tissue defects, unusual infections, limited reconstructive donor sites, peripheral nerve injuries and traumatic amputations. Late challenges to rehabilitation include the development of heterotopic ossification in amputation stumps. This paper outlines the approach taken by the reconstructive team at the Royal Centre for Defence Medicine in managing these most difficult of reconstructive challenges
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