GMS Interdiscip Plast Reconstr Surg DGPW
October 2015
Introduction: It is known that pulmonary hypertension is associated with worse outcome in both cardiac and non-cardiac surgery. The aims of our retrospective analysis were to evaluate the outcomes of our patients with pulmonary hypertension undergoing major orthopedic surgery and to give experience-based recommendations for the perioperative management.
Material And Methods: From 92 patients with pulmonary hypertension undergoing different kinds of surgical procedures from 2011-2014 in a tertiary academic hospital we evaluated 16 patients with major orthopedic surgery for perioperative morbidity and mortality.
Background: Unacceptably high rates of loosening of a novel cementless cup system (Mathys, SeleXys TH+) have been reported. In this study, our mid-term-results with the SeleXys TH+ cup are compared with an established pressfit cup (Ceraver, Cerafit-R).
Methods: Between 2008 and 2011, a total of 407 implantations, 19 of them bilaterally, were conducted on 388 patients with the implants in question.
Substantial inflammatory disturbances following major trauma have been found throughout the posttraumatic course of polytraumatized patients, which was confirmed in experimental models of trauma and in vitro settings. As a consequence, the principle of damage control surgery (DCS) has developed over the last two decades and has been successfully introduced in the treatment of severely injured patients. The aim of damage control surgery and orthopaedics (DCO) is to limit additional iatrogenic trauma in the vulnerable phase following major injury.
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