Lawrence Kyle W, Link Lauren, Lavin Patricia, Schwarzkopf Ran, Rozell Joshua C
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, NYU Langone Health, 301 East 17th Street, 15th Fl Suite 1518, New York, NY, 10003, USA.
Knee Surg Relat Res. 2024 Mar 8;36(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s43019-024-00215-8.
Mechanical falls represent a potential adverse event after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and may introduce further injury and delay postoperative recovery. This study aimed to identify patient characteristics associated with inpatient falls, to determine the impact of inpatient falls on surgical outcomes following TKA, and to describe the relationship between tourniquet and/or adductor canal block (ACB) use and fall rates.
Patients undergoing primary, elective TKA at a single institution between 2018 and 2022 were retrospectively analyzed. Patients were stratified into groups based on whether they sustained a postoperative inpatient fall or not. Perioperative characteristics, lengths of stay (LOS), rates of 90-day readmissions, and revisions were compared, and fall characteristics were described. Subanalysis was conducted comparing fall incidence based on tourniquet and/or ACB use.
In total 6472 patients were included with 39 (0.6%) sustaining falls. Falls most commonly occurred on postoperative days one (43.6%) and two (30.8%), and were most commonly due to loss of balance (41.9%) or buckling (35.5%). Six (15.4%) fall patients sustained minor injuries, and one (2.6%) sustained major injury (malleolar fracture requiring non-operative orthopaedic management). The LOS (3.0 ± 1.5 vs 2.3 ± 1.5 days, p = 0.002) and all-cause revision rates at latest follow-up (10.3% vs. 2.0%, p = 0.008) were significantly higher in the fall group. Falls were comparable across subgroups based on tourniquet and/or ACB use (p = 0.429).
Patients who fell had a longer LOS and higher revision rate postoperatively. Rates of inpatient falls were comparable regardless of tourniquet and/or ACB use. Concern for inpatient falls should not influence surgeons when considering the use of tourniquets and/or ACBs, though well-designed, large-volume, prospective randomized studies are warranted to better understand this relationship.
机械性跌倒为全膝关节置换术(TKA)后潜在的不良事件,可能导致进一步损伤并延迟术后恢复。本研究旨在确定与住院患者跌倒相关的患者特征,确定住院患者跌倒对TKA术后手术结果的影响,并描述止血带和/或内收肌管阻滞(ACB)的使用与跌倒发生率之间的关系。
对2018年至2022年间在单一机构接受初次择期TKA的患者进行回顾性分析。根据患者术后是否在住院期间跌倒进行分组。比较围手术期特征、住院时间(LOS)、90天再入院率和翻修率,并描述跌倒特征。基于止血带和/或ACB的使用情况进行亚分析,比较跌倒发生率。
共纳入6472例患者,其中39例(0.6%)发生跌倒。跌倒最常发生在术后第1天(43.6%)和第2天(30.8%),最常见的原因是平衡丧失(41.9%)或屈曲(35.5%)。6例(15.4%)跌倒患者受轻伤,1例(2.6%)受重伤(踝关节骨折,需接受非手术骨科治疗)。跌倒组的LOS(3.0±1.5天 vs 2.3±1.5天,p = 0.002)和最新随访时的全因翻修率(10.3% vs. 2.0%,p = 0.008)显著更高。基于止血带和/或ACB的使用情况,各亚组的跌倒情况相似(p = 0.429)。
跌倒患者术后住院时间更长,翻修率更高。无论是否使用止血带和/或ACB,住院患者跌倒发生率相似。尽管需要设计良好、样本量大的前瞻性随机研究来更好地理解这种关系,但在考虑使用止血带和/或ACB时,对住院患者跌倒的担忧不应影响外科医生的决策。