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Journal Article

Citation

Arroyo W, Nelson KJ, Belmont PJ, Bader JO, Schoenfeld AJ. Injury 2013; 44(12): 1745-1749.

Affiliation

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, William Beaumont Army Medical Center, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso, TX, United States.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.injury.2013.08.007

PMID

24008226

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: This study sought to determine risk factors that influence mortality, cardiac events, venous thrombo-embolic disease (VTED), and infection following fractures of the pelvis and/or acetabulum. METHODS: The 2008 National Sample Program (NSP) of the National Trauma Databank was queried to identify all patients who sustained pelvic and acetabular fractures. Demographic data, injury-specific and surgical characteristics, and medical co-morbidities were abstracted. The occurrence of in-hospital mortality, cardiac events, VTED and infections were documented. Univariate testing, weighted logistic regression, and sensitivity analyses were performed to identify significant independent predictors of mortality and the complications under study. RESULTS: The NSP contained 41,297 cases of pelvic trauma. In-hospital mortality was documented in 3055 (7%) and one or more complications occurred in 6932 (17%). Cardiac events transpired in 2% of patients, VTED in 4% and infections in 3%. Increasing age, shock, time to procedure, ISS, and GCS were predictive of mortality. Cardiac events were found to be influenced by obesity, diabetes, ISS, GCS, age, and trauma mechanism. VTED was impacted by obesity, history of respiratory disease, male sex, ISS, GCS, medical co-morbidities, and time to procedure. Injuries caused by mechanisms other than blunt trauma, shock, age, ISS, GCS, medical co-morbidities, and time to procedure were associated with infection. CONCLUSIONS: Several important predictors were identified for specific complications and mortality following pelvic trauma. The design of this study may render it more generalisable to American patients with pelvic injuries. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II - Prognostic retrospective study of a prospective dataset.


Language: en

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