Microfracture is a minimal invasive method with good short-term results in the treatment of small cartilage defects. A deterioration of the results starts 18 months after surgery and is most evident in the ICRS-score. The best prognostic factors have young patients with defects on the femoral condyles.
Sixty patients with foot or ankle trauma were randomized and treated in three groups. In intermittent impulse compression, an air pad under the foot was inflated every 20 seconds, thus activating the venous foot pump. In continuous cryotherapy, ice water circulates between the ice box and the cold pad. The ice water was changed once per day. In standard therapy, the injured extremity was treated with cool packs, which were changed 4 times per day. Beginning at admission, every 24 hours the circumference was measured around the ankle, midfoot, and forefoot. After 24 hours of treatment, there was a 47% reduction in swelling with the A-V impulse System, 33% with continuous cryotherapy, and 17% with cool packs. After 4 days of postoperative treatment, the A-V impulse System reduced the swelling by 74% versus 70% with continuous cryotherapy and 45% with cool packs. Both new methods are preferable to cool packs. Because of the better preoperative results, the A-V impulse System proved to be the most effective device.
Over the period between 06/00 and 03/03, 41 patients with different injuries of the upper cervical spine were treated by a halo fixator and were statistically recorded. The collective showed different injury patterns, 2 fractures of occiput condyles (5%), 3 Jefferson fractures (7%), 1 combined injury of the odontoid process and an atlas fracture (2%), 32 odontoid fractures (78%), 2 hanged-man-fractures Typ Effendi II (5%) and one case of pathologic fractures from the 2. to the 4. cervical vertebral body based on a plasmocytoma (2%). 31 of 41 patients could be examined for a follow up; 40 complete medical histories were well documented and could be analysed. As complications we had screw loosening in 6 cases (15%), a complete tear out of screws in 2 cases (5%). One patient took the halo away by himself two times, so after the second time surgical stabilisation was performed (2,5%). One case of intracranial penetration of a screw happened after the patient fell down in an accident with the halo (2,5%). Infection of the screw pins appeared in 4 cases (10%) and we had 2 cases of skin necrosis (5%). A second reduction after redisplacement was necessary in 8 cases (20%). 23 patients suffered from pain at the insertion of the screws (75%) and 18 patients complained of pressure in the head (58%). On the question of the comfort of this kind of therapy answered 18 patients with "intolerable" (58%), 10 patients with middle (32%) and 3 patients with tolerable (10%). Despite of the large number of different complications and the miscomfort of a halo fixator we think that there are still indications for treatment of special injuries of the upper cervical spine with a halo fixator. One important aspect is the lack of adequate alternatives even with regard to the biomechanical stability.
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