11 research outputs found

    A scoping review comparing two common surgical approaches to the hip for hemiarthroplasty

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    Hemiarthroplasty for hip fracture is a common surgical procedure. A number of distinct approaches are used to access the hip joint. The most commonly used are the direct lateral approach (DLA), and the posterior approach (PA). Internationally there is little consensus on which of these approaches to use. Current guidance is based on a limited selection of evidence and choice of approach is frequently based on surgeon preference. Historically, recommendations have been made based on dislocation rates. In light of technical advancements and greater recognition of patient priorities, outcomes such as post-operative function and pain may be considered more important in the modern context. The aim of this scoping review was to summarise the literature pertaining to the comparison of common surgical approaches to the hip for hemiarthroplasty.This article is freely available via Open Access. Click on the Additional Link above to access the full-text via the publisher's site.Publishe

    The Perioperative Management of Partial Knee Arthroplasty: Anesthesia, Pain Management, and Blood Loss

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    Pain is the body’s physiological reaction to tissue injury and involves nociceptive, inflammatory, and ischemic phenomena. Inflammation can lead to peripheral and central pain sensitization. The extent of this pain will depend on both phenotype and genotype of the patient. The following chapter discusses the advantages of unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) to reduce pain and blood loss after knee arthroplasty. Optimizing pain management starts with preemptive and preventive analgesia. Today’s modern pain control consists of multimodal pain management by combining different drugs and anesthetic techniques with different mechanisms of action. Most often, acetaminophen and NSAIDs are used with morphine only for breakthrough pain. The latter should be limited as much as possible because of its side effects. Local infiltration analgesia (LIA) or adductor canal blockade is used most commonly to reduce peripheral sensitization. Unicompartmental knee arthroplasty, which is less invasive, will help reduce the intensity of the postoperative pain. Optimizing blood management has the aim to reduce or eliminate blood transfusion. UKA reduces blood loss by its surgical technique, but a multimodal approach is indicated here also. Preoperative hemoglobin optimization, preoperative bleeding risk assessment and bridging strategy, the use of tranexamic acid, and the local hemostatic effect of LIA with the adrenergic properties of ropivacaine should all be part of this multimodal program. Multimodal pain strategies and blood management protocols have proven value after total knee arthroplasty. The same protocols can logically be applied to patients undergoing UKA. Patients undergoing UKA today can expect excellent pain relief, low morbidity, and rapid recovery when advanced pain and blood management protocols are employed
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