Publications by authors named "Heppenstall R"

Objective: To evaluate the relationship between the well-leg compartment pressures and time during hemilithotomy position for fracture fixation.

Design: Prospective.

Setting: Level 1 trauma center.

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Objective: To determine whether the superior sensitivity of computed tomography (CT) results in changes in treatment plans for cervical spine fractures that have been diagnosed on plain films alone.

Design: Retrospective review of radiographic studies for cervical spine trauma.

Setting/participants: An orthopaedic spine surgeon (SS), an orthopaedic traumatologist (OT), an orthopaedic spine fellow (SF), and an orthopaedic chief resident (CR) were independently presented thirty-nine cases of cervical spine trauma imaged with adequate plain radiographs and with CT.

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Objective: To evaluate the interobserver and intraobserver agreement for both treatment plan and fracture classification of tibial plateau fractures using plain films alone and with computed tomography (CT) scans.

Design: Prospective study to assess the impact of an advanced radiologic study on the agreement of treatment plan and fracture classification of tibial plateau fractures.

Setting/participants: Two orthopaedic traumatologists, two orthopaedic residents, and two skeletal radiologists were presented with twenty-one cases of tibial plateau fractures imaged with plain films and with CT scans.

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In addition to consultation with an experienced hematologist, the following are recommendations regarding compartment syndrome in a patient with an inherited bleeding disorder. Von Willebrand's Disease. Humate-P (rich in von Willebrand factor) is the replacement therapy of choice for surgical procedures in patients with von Willebrand's disease.

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The authors present a case of a lower leg compartment syndrome that developed after a regional chemotherapy technique was used for recurrent melanoma of the foot in a 74-year-old woman. The diagnosis was based on the results of physical examination, with confirmation by intracompartmental pressures. Prompt consultation of orthopedic surgeons and fasciotomy helped avoid potentially crippling sequelae.

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This study used an experimental model (canine hind limb) of compartment syndrome, monitored with phosphorus 31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, to determine the pressure threshold for metabolic deterioration in skeletal muscle previously subjected to ischemia. Our results show that muscle subjected to 6 h of antecedent ischemia has a lower tolerance to increased tissue pressure than otherwise normal muscle. The threshold was found to occur at a delta P (difference between mean blood pressure and limb compartment pressure) of 40 mm Hg, compared with a delta P of 30 mm Hg in muscle that was not subjected to antecedent ischemia.

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Two hundred seventy-one tibial nonunions of average duration of 23.5 months (range, 9-69 months) were treated with direct current (167 patients), capacitive coupled electrical stimulation (56 patients), or bone graft surgery (48 patients). Logistic regression analysis was used to compare heal rates among the 3 treatment methods, to identify risk factors adversely affecting the heal rate, and to predict the probability of successful healing of a nonunion of any given risk profile treated with each of the 3 forms of therapy.

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Compartment syndrome in the hand and forearm is a serious and debilitating complication of crush injury. Pain with passive motion is the most reliable physical finding; however, compartment pressure measurement is the only truly reliable method of diagnosis. Immediate and adequate decompression will prevent the development of Volkmann's ischemic contracture and its associated severe loss of function in the affected extremity.

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Fractures caused by gunshots are increasingly common in urban hospitals and trauma centers. The rising incidence and complexity of these injuries present difficult management problems and health care burdens. In a 3-year period, from 1989 through 1991, 21 patients with femoral shaft fractures from low-velocity bullets were treated with intramedullary fixation within 15 hours of admission.

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These data do not prove a statistical superiority of conventional antibiotics or Septopal in the treatment of chronic osteomyelitis. This result, however, is complicated by the biased data set represented by the combined treatment. The data do suggest that cost of treatment is considerably less in patients who are treated with local antibiotics (i.

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The diagnoses of osteomyelitis and prosthetic joint infections are usually made on the basis of clinical, laboratory, and radiographic examination. The diagnostic studies presently employed to diagnosis and assess osteomyelitis and prosthetic joint infections are described. A universally applied classification system for stratifying osteomyelitis and prosthetic joint infection would provide a framework for the evaluation of medical and surgical treatment efficacy.

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One hundred nine patients with long-bone fracture nonunion, chronic refractory osteomyelitis, and posttraumatic amputation were evaluated to assess the impact of chronic disability on the quality of life. The quality of life parameters were defined by a functional assessment instrument, the Arthritis Impact Measurement Scale (AIMS), and a Psychosocial Adjustment to Illness Scale (PAIS). A spouse PAIS self-report instrument was administered to assess the psychosocial adjustment of spouses or significant others.

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In the past 5 years, a great deal of time and effort has been expended in an effort to better define clinical, anatomic, and laboratory parameters of CECS. It is now a well-recognized entity and one that can be readily resolved with fasciotomy. But the reasons for predisposition and the pathophysiologic mechanisms remain obscure.

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Two patients with three postoperative calf compartment syndromes, which followed prolonged lithotomy positioning, will be presented. Potential physiologic mechanisms are described, and a review of current cases in literature are summated.

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One hundred nine patients with long-bone fracture nonunion, chronic refractory osteomyelitis, or posttraumatic amputation were evaluated for the impact of chronic disability on quality of life, as measured by the Arthritis Impact Measurement Scale (AIMS) and the Psychosocial Adjustment to Illness Scale (PAIS). A self-administered PAIS for spouses assessed psychosocial adjustment of spouses or significant others. A final questionnaire ranked the reasons for either continuing medical therapy or accepting amputation.

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Forty-two consecutive patients with chronic osteomyelitis complicating persistent tibial nonunion and chronic osteomyelitis complicating tibial fracture with segmental bone loss were treated from January 1979 through December 1986 using a protocol including either open cancellous bone grafting (Friedlaender-Papineau technique), posterolateral bone grafting (Harmon technique), or local or microvascular soft-tissue transfer before cancellous bone grafting. Each patient had undergone surgical debridement and intravenous antibiotic therapy before inclusion in this study. Patients were classified using a staging system which included consideration of anatomic location of the infection within the bone; extent of bone involvement; quality of soft-tissue envelope and vascular integrity; and generalized host status.

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A group of 40 consecutive patients with hip fractures were studied and confirmed to have a high incidence of protein-calorie malnutrition. The prospective nutritional assessment performed for this study included: serum albumin, serum transferrin, anthropometric measurements, skin testing for delayed hypersensitivity, total lymphocyte count, and a 24-h urine collection for metabolic and nitrogen balance determinations. At 3 months after their hip fracture, 37.

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Fifty patients with posttraumatic tibial nonunion complicated by chronic refractory osteomyelitis were treated with intravenous antibiotics. Fifteen patients (30%) experienced 18 episodes of leukopenia; seven of these patients became neutropenic and three became severely neutropenic. No patient became neutropenic prior to the 20th day of antibiotic therapy.

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The purpose of this study was to quantitate the intracellular high-energy phosphate compounds during 6 hours of tissue ischemia in the anterior tibial compartment of beagles subjected to an induced traumatized compartment syndrome. The goal of this work was to provide clinicians with objective criteria to augment clinical judgment regarding surgical intervention in the impending compartment syndrome. A beagle model was utilized in which the Delta pressure (difference between the mean arterial pressure and compartment pressure) could be controlled.

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Of all tissues of the extremities, muscle is the least tolerant of ischemia. Hypothermia of tissue is considered beneficial for the maintenance of viability of muscle in amputated limbs before surgical replantation, but it has never been established that conventional cooling in an ice bath or its equivalent (temperature of tissue, approximately 1 degree Celsius) is the optimum level of hypothermia for minimizing metabolic derangement in ischemic muscle. In this study, we first defined the time course and level of metabolic derangement of muscle in twenty-eight ischemic hind limbs in cats at 22, 15, 10, 5, and 1 degree Celsius.

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Twenty-eight consecutive patients with chronic refractory osteomyelitis uncomplicated by persistent segmental bone defect, fracture nonunion, septic arthritis, total joint arthroplasty, or major systemic disease (immune deficiency, malignancy, diabetes mellitus, malnutrition, or renal or hepatic failure) were treated from January, 1980 through December, 1985 to evaluate the potential benefits of hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Patients were classified by a staging system that took into account the bone involved; subchondral, periarticular bone involvement; extent of bone involvement; quality of soft tissue envelope and vascular supply; and general health status of the patient. Using this staging system, patients were assigned to either hyperbaric oxygen therapy or control status after their initial debridement.

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In an experimental ischemic compartment syndrome in dogs, phosphorus (31P) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy was used to determine the tissue pressure threshold at which resting skeletal muscle begins to use anaerobic energy sources due to insufficient cellular oxygen delivery. The interactive effects of systemic perfusion pressure and moderate muscle trauma on this anaerobic threshold were also evaluated. The severity of cell injury produced by various degrees of compartment pressurization over an eight-hour period was concomitantly studied using muscle biopsy and electron microscopy.

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