Background: Limb injuries represent a constant and severe problem. Several lower limb injuries are more frequent than upper limb injuries. Over time, in an attempt to quantify the severity of traumas and to establish guidelines for the decision whether to save or amputate a mangled extremity, several scoring systems have been reported. Most refer to bone fractures, soft tissue damage, vascular, nerves and tendon lesions.
Materials And Methods: Articles dealing with mangled lower extremities published in the last 15 years were analyzed. Other inclusion criteriaincluded:articles reporting MESS, PSI, LSI, and Gustillo-Anderson scores, studies based on groups of more than 25 patients, and English language articles. We tried to determine if there was good correlation between amputation recommendations and various scores of injury, with regard to combat wounds and civilian injuries, in adult and pediatric groups.
Results: Thirty-two papers fulfilled our criteria; in 17 of these, correlation between mangled extremity scores and the decision to amputate or salvage the limb was well-defined. Good correlation between MESS and amputation was found in 25% of the papers. The highest correlation was found for pediatric injuries and combined adult and pediatric combat injuries.
Conclusions: The mangled extremity is a long-lasting, unsolved problem, with much debate and a large number of protocols and scoring systems, but with no unanimously-accepted solution. Many mangled extremities are borderline cases, and the decision to amputate or to salvage a limb must be carefully assessed. With advances in the medical field over the last 15 years, more mangled lower extremities are salvaged, especially in civilian injuries.
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Cureus
November 2024
Emergency Medicine, West Midlands Deanery, Birmingham, GBR.
Complex limb injuries are combination injuries that involve all components of a limb's tissue, such as skin, bone with its surrounding soft tissue cover, and neurovascular elements. Complex limb trauma often has a background of a significant mechanism of injuries such as high-velocity road traffic accidents, ballistic injuries, industrial accidents, and other major mechanisms of injuries which involve high amounts of energy transfer through these tissue layers. These injuries pose a major challenge to trauma and orthopaedic surgeons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Med
November 2024
Praxis medOT, Hirslanden Clinic St. Anna, University of Lucerne, St-Anna-Str. 32, 6006 Lucerne, Switzerland.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg
January 2025
From the Department of Orthopedic Surgery (M.P.F.), School of Medical Sciences, Orebro University, Orebro, Sweden; Center for Trauma and Critical Care, Department of Surgery (B.C., M.M., S.G., B.S.), George Washington University, Washington, DC; and School of Medical Sciences (Y.C., S.M.), Orebro University, Orebro, Sweden.
Background: There are no validated and sensitive models that can guide the decision regarding amputation in patients with mangled lower extremities. We sought to describe a simple scoring model, the Mangled Lower Extremity (MangLE) score, which can predict those who are highly unlikely to need an amputation as a means to direct resources to this cohort.
Methods: This is a retrospective study using the 2013-2021 American College of Surgeons Trauma Quality Improvement Program data set.
Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open
October 2024
From the Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Fla.
Post traumatic lymphedema (PTL) is a known complication of extremity trauma that is detrimental to limb form and function, healing, and quality of life. In cases of complex lower extremity trauma with vascular and extensive soft tissue injury, the risk of PTL is increased. However, many trauma patients are lost to follow-up, making the risk and potential management of these patients' lymphedema difficult to characterize.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMedicine (Baltimore)
June 2024
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Research Institute of Clinical Medicine of Jeonbuk National University - Biomedical Research Institute of Jeonbuk National University Hospital, Jeonju, Jeonbuk, Republic of Korea.
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