Eickhoff Alexander Maximilian, Cintean Raffael, Fiedler Carina, Gebhard Florian, Schütze Konrad, Richter Peter
Department of Trauma, Hand, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital Ulm, Ulm, Germany.
Z Orthop Unfall. 2023 Oct;161(5):526-531. doi: 10.1055/a-1740-4445. Epub 2022 Mar 2.
In order to prevent implant failure and secondary fracture dislocation, it is often recommended that patients perform partial weight-bearing after surgery of the lower extremity. Previous examinations showed that patients are often not able to follow these instructions. In this study, patients who had undergone surgery of the lower extremity were studied in order to analyze whether incorrect loading influenced the number and severity of complications.
Fifty-one patients were equipped with electronic shoe insoles, which measure loading and other parameters. The measurement period was 24 to 102 hours. Median duration of follow-up was 490 days. The primary outcome parameter was postoperative complications leading to revision surgery. Statistical analysis was performed using the chi-square and Fisher exact tests with significance set at a p < 0.05.
Seven out of fifty-one patients had postoperative complications. Four wound complications, one implant failure, chronic instability after fracture of the tibia, and one implant loosening of a hip prosthesis were recorded. In total, 26 of 39 patients were not able to follow the postoperative instructions. Five of the twenty-six patients with difficulties in partial weight-bearing suffered a postoperative complication. In comparison, only 2 of the other 25 patients were affected. There was no statistically significant correlation between high weight-bearing and occurrence of complications (p = 0.29).
Most of the patients were unable to follow the surgeon's instructions for partial weight-bearing. Excessive loading did not seem to influence the number and severity of postoperative complications, especially regarding implant failure. Therefore, we should continue with measurements and reevaluate the "partial weight-bearing doctrine".
为防止植入物失效和继发性骨折脱位,通常建议患者在下肢手术后进行部分负重。先前的检查表明,患者往往无法遵循这些指示。在本研究中,对接受下肢手术的患者进行了研究,以分析不正确的负重是否会影响并发症的数量和严重程度。
51名患者配备了可测量负重及其他参数的电子鞋垫。测量期为24至102小时。随访的中位持续时间为490天。主要结局参数是导致翻修手术的术后并发症。采用卡方检验和Fisher精确检验进行统计分析,显著性设定为p < 0.05。
51名患者中有7名出现术后并发症。记录了4例伤口并发症、1例植入物失效、胫骨骨折后的慢性不稳定以及1例髋关节假体植入物松动。39名患者中共有26名无法遵循术后指示。26名部分负重困难的患者中有5名出现了术后并发症。相比之下,其他25名患者中只有2名受到影响。高负重与并发症的发生之间没有统计学上的显著相关性(p = 0.29)。
大多数患者无法遵循外科医生的部分负重指示。过度负重似乎并未影响术后并发症的数量和严重程度,尤其是在植入物失效方面。因此,我们应继续进行测量并重新评估“部分负重原则”。