The current thesis aims to address the prognosis and management of patients who have injuries necessitating orthopaedic surgery.
In Chapter 1 I introduce the thesis, and in Chapter 5 I offer conclusions and summarize the contribution of the work. In Chapter 5, I address the scope, rationale, key findings, limitations and implications.
Chapter 2 is a systematic review and meta-analysis investigating the effectiveness of antibiotic prophylaxis in patients with open fracture of the extremities. The results demonstrate moderate quality evidence of an important reduction in the infection rate in patients receiving, versus not receiving, antibiotic prophylaxis. We found no difference in infection rate with longer (3 to 5 days) versus shorter (1 day) duration of antibiotics – this finding warrants only low confidence.
Chapter 3 is a systematic survey of current practice and recommendations regarding antibiotic prophylaxis in open fracture management. Authors of publications over the last decade strongly support early systemic antibiotics prophylaxis for patients with open fractures of extremities. In practice, most used systemic antibiotics with both gram-positive and gram-negative coverage, and continued the administration for 2 to 3 days. Most recommendations suggested gram-positive coverage for less severe injuries, and administration duration of no more than 3 days (half suggested 1 day). For more severe injuries, most recommendations suggested broad antimicrobial coverage continued for 2 to 3 days.
Chapter 4 is a longitudinal study investigating predictors of persistent post-surgical pain after tibia fracture. We found significant independent associations between resolution of pain and male sex, non-smoking and alcohol consumption. Age, obesity, type of fracture (closed versus open), additional injuries, and post-operative weight-bearing status did not predict resolution of pain. Our findings suggest that clinicians should be particularly alert to the possibility of troublesome post-operative pain in female smokers who do not drink alcohol. Clinicians may consider counselling patients to discontinue smoking, inform them that they are at nearly double the risk of incidence of troublesome post-operative pain (in addition to the long-term adverse health consequences of smoking). / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Antibiotic prophylaxis reduces infection with 10% fewer event rate than the group without antibiotic prophylaxis (low to moderate confidence in estimates). The optimal antibiotic regimens and duration remain uncertain. There is a higher risk of persistent post-surgical pain in female smokers who do not use alcohol, following tibia fractures.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/22893 |
Date | January 2018 |
Creators | Chang, Yaping |
Contributors | Guyatt, Gordon, Bhandari, Mohit, Busse, Jason, Thabane, Lehana, Health Research Methodology |
Source Sets | McMaster University |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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