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Journal Article

Citation

Parker S, Afsharpad A. Case Rep. Orthop. 2014; 2014: e164632.

Affiliation

Trauma & Orthopaedics, Barnet Hospital, Wellhouse Lane, Barnet, Hertfordshire EN5 3DJ, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Hindawi Publishing)

DOI

10.1155/2014/164632

PMID

25431716

PMCID

PMC4241333

Abstract

Introduction. Ground-level falls are typically regarded as a minor mechanism of injury that do not necessitate trauma team activation; however, they represent a significant proportion of hospitalised trauma and can result in multisystem injury. Case Presentation. A 79-year-old nursing home resident was brought to the emergency department following an unwitnessed fall. She suffered dementia and had a seizure in the department resulting in a reduced GCS, making history and examination difficult. She was diagnosed with a right proximal humerus fracture and admitted under joint orthopedic and medical care. Following orthopedic review, further X-rays were requested which showed bilateral neck of femur fractures. The following day she had bilateral hip hemiarthroplasties and K-wire stabilisation of the right shoulder. Several days later, when cognition had improved, she was noted to be avoiding use of the left arm and was found to also have a left proximal humerus fracture which was managed conservatively.

CONCLUSION. Trauma patients with reduced cognitive function should undergo full ATLS assessment, and a prospective trial is required to see if age should be incorporated as a criteria for trauma team activation. More liberal use of advanced imaging such as a full body CT-scan may be beneficial.


Language: en

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