Purpose:
Knee arthropathy is a frequent complication affecting hemophilic patients, which can cause severe pain and disability. When conservative measures fail, total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may be performed.
Methods:
Eighteen TKA were performed in 15 patients with hemophilia during a 24-year period in a Hemophilia Comprehensive Care Center. All patients were evaluated by a multidisciplinary team constituted by a hematologist, an orthopedic surgeon, and a physical medicine and rehabilitation physician. Mean follow-up was 11.3 years.
Results:
Ten-year survival rate with prosthesis removal as end point was 94.3%. At last, follow-up visual analog pain scale score was 3.2 points, knee osteoarthritis outcome scale was 86.7 points, and mean range of motion was 88°. Only two patients required perioperative transfusion. Complication rate was 27.8% and included two infections, two prosthesis stiffness, and one case of recurrent hemarthrosis.
Conclusion:
After appropriate medical optimization and with prompt rehabilitation, TKA can be performed in hemophilic patients with good clinical results and survivor rates comparable to nonhemophilic patients.
Study Design: Retrospective cohort study conducted at tertiary spinal trauma referral center. Objective: We aimed to determine if early definitive management of spine fractures in patients admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) shortens the intubation time and the length of stay (LOS), without increasing mortality. Methods: The medical records of all patients admitted to the ICU and submitted to surgical stabilization of spine fractures were reviewed over a 10-year period. Time to surgery, number of fractured vertebrae, degree of neurological injury, Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS II), ASA score and associated trauma were evaluated. Surgeries performed on the first 72 hours after trauma were defined as “early surgeries.” Intubation time, LOS on ICU, overall LOS and mortality rate were compared between patients operated early and late. Results: Fifty patients were included, 21 with cervical fractures, 23 thoracic and 6 lumbar. Baseline characteristics did not differ between patients in both groups. Patients with early surgical stabilization had significantly shorter intubation time, ICU-LOS and overall LOS, with no differences in terms of mortality rate. After multivariate adjustments overall LOS was significantly shorter in patients operated earlier. Conclusions: Early spinal stabilization (<72 hours) of severely injured patients is beneficial and shortens the intubation time, ICU-LOS and overall LOS, with no differences in terms of mortality rate. Although some patients may require a delay in treatment due to necessary medical stabilization, every reasonable effort should be made to treat patients with unstable spinal fractures as early as possible. Level of Evidence of the Study: Level III.
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