Chapter 40: Open Fractures Flashcards
What is the interobserver agreement of Gustilo-Anderson open fracture classification scheme?
60%
What is the psi for wound irrigation?
7-8 psi
1 liter bag @ 300PSI plus 16-18ga needle
Or 30mL syringe and 18ga needle
Covering the wound reduces infection from 12% to what %?
5%
What % of infections are caused by organisms cultured at time of initial presentation?
18% (most are hospital acquired)
What % of traumatic appendicular fractures in dogs are open?
In cats?
Dogs 14%
Cats 29%
Describe type 1, 2 and 3 on the Gustillo-Anderson Classification scheme for open fractures?
Type 1: Wound < 1cm (sharp fragments make wound, then often retract below level of skin)
Type 2: Wound >1cm without extensive soft tissue damage, flaps or avulsions (often wound was caused by outside forces)
Type 3: Extensive soft tissue damage (avulsion, degloving, bone loss) fractures with neurovascular injury, gunshots, traumatic partial amputations
There are 3 subtypes of Type 3:
IIIa: Adequate soft tissue available
IIIb: extensive loss of soft tissue, periosteal stripping, massive contamination
IIIc: arterial injury that will require repair (often we amputate in vet med)
In humans, if antibiotics are started within 3 hours of injury, infection rate decreases to what % vs. >4 hours?
4.7% if within 3 hours
7.4% if >4 hours
In humans:
For type I and II fractures, what empiric antibiotic is advised?
For type III?
I and II: 1st or 2nd gen cephalosporin
III: cephalosporin + fluoroquinolone
Is there evidence that initial surgical debridement must happen in <6hr?
No - you should treat with wound care but don’t need sx that quick.
VAC at what pressure reduced edema, increased blood flow, accelerated granulation tissue formation, and increased bacterial clearance?
-125mmHg
In a type III open fracture, pedicle and muscle flaps can be used if you can’t reconstruct the soft tissues locally. What % do they reduce nonunion to (from initially 30%)?
Reduced to 5% with early coverage - even in infected wounds.
For surgical approaches for different types of open fractures, what should you do?
Type I: Same as for closed fracture of the same type
Type II: Can sometimes treat same as closed - use your judgement
Type III: You may not be able to do internal fixation
** benefits of stability outweigh the potential harm of implants or need for future explant
Cortical grafts in open/contaminated fractures are at risk of what?
becoming a sequestrum
What are the complication rates for open fractures by type?
The nonunion rates?
Complications:
Type I 0-2%
Type II 2-10%
Type III 10-50%
Nonunions
Type I 0-5%
Type II 1-14%
Type III 2-37%