Orthonotes
Orthonotes
by the.bonestories
v3.0 Fusion
v3.0 Fusion
PubMed Narrative Review Evidence Moderate

Damage Control Orthopaedics in Spinal Trauma.

The Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons | 2021 | Oitment C, Thornley P, Jentzsch T, Pahuta M

In-App Reader

Open Source

Journal and index pages often block iframe embedding. This reader keeps the evidence details in Orthonotes and leaves the source page one click away.

Source
PubMed
Type
Narrative Review
Evidence
Moderate

Abstract

[Indexed for MEDLINE] 11. J Orthop Trauma. 2007 Aug;21(7):477-81; dicussion 481-4. doi: 10.1097/BOT.0b013e31813bbcfe. Damage control nailing. Higgins TF(1), Horwitz DS. Author information: (1)University of Utah Department of Orthopaedics, Salt Lake City, Utah 84108, USA. thomas.higgins@hsc.utah.edu The role of intramedullary nailing of the femur and the timing for this procedure in the trauma patient with multiple injuries has been widely debated. Recent literature has advocated the idea of "damage control orthopaedics," promoting temporary external fixation for stabilization of long bone fractures in the acute setting. This paper advances an alternative to damage control orthopaedics, the option of rapidly executed small-diameter unreamed retrograde nailing of the femur for the patient with polytrauma who will be undergoing simultaneous surgery for other injuries. This technique offers the advantages of rapid stabilization performed under controlled circumstances in the operating room, without some of the disadvantages of using external fixation in this situation. DOI: 10.1097/BOT.0b013e31813bbcfe

Linked Wiki Topics

This article has not been linked to a wiki topic yet.

Linked Cases

This article has not been linked to a case yet.

Linked Atlases

This article has not been linked to an atlas yet.