Department of Trauma and Orthopedic Surgery, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Martinistr. 52, 20246, Hamburg, Germany.
Arch Orthop Trauma Surg. 2024 Jun;144(6):2915-2923. doi: 10.1007/s00402-024-05391-6. Epub 2024 May 30.
Distal radius fracture (DRF) is one of the three most common fractures of the human body with increasing incidences in all groups of age. Known causes of increasing incidence, such as ageing of the population or increased obesity, have been described and discussed. So far, literature reports ambivalent effects of body mass index (BMI) on bone physiology. It is worthwhile to examine the influence of BMI on the outcome of fractures more detailed. This study aims to investigate the influence of an abnormal BMI on fracture severity and treatment, as well as clinical, radiological, and functional outcome to improve clinical decision making.
A retrospective observational study was conducted on data obtained from patients, who underwent open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) of a DRF at a local Level 1 Trauma Center between May 2018 and October 2021. Follow-up examinations were performed approximately 1 year after surgical fracture treatment, during which various questionnaires and functional measurements (CMS, DASH, NRS, ROM) were applied. In addition, postoperative complications were recorded and radiological examinations of the affected hand were performed. After excluding incomplete data sets and applying set exclusion criteria, the complete data of 105 patients were analyzed.
74 patients were female and 31 male with significant difference in mean BMI [p = 0.002; female: 23.8 (SD ± 3.3), men: 26.2 (SD ± 3.9)]. Patients with higher BMI had significantly more severe fractures (p = 0.042). However, there was no significant difference in surgery time for fracture management. At follow-up, patients with lower BMI showed a smaller difference in hand strength between the fractured and the other hand (p = 0.017). The BMI had no significant effect on the clinical and radiological outcome.
Despite the ambivalent effects of BMI on the skeletal system, our findings indicate that a higher BMI is associated with more severe DRF. Thereby BMI does not correlate with surgery time for fracture treatment. Furthermore, no evidence of an influence on the clinical and radiological outcome could be detected.
桡骨远端骨折(DRF)是人体最常见的三种骨折之一,各年龄段的发病率都在不断增加。人口老龄化和肥胖症等已知的发病率上升的原因已经被描述和讨论过。到目前为止,文献报告了身体质量指数(BMI)对骨骼生理学的影响具有矛盾性。因此,更详细地研究 BMI 对骨折结果的影响是值得的。本研究旨在探讨异常 BMI 对骨折严重程度和治疗以及临床、放射学和功能结果的影响,以改善临床决策。
对 2018 年 5 月至 2021 年 10 月在当地 1 级创伤中心接受桡骨远端骨折切开复位内固定(ORIF)的患者数据进行回顾性观察性研究。在手术骨折治疗后大约 1 年进行随访检查,在此期间应用了各种问卷和功能测量(CMS、DASH、NRS、ROM)。此外,还记录了术后并发症并进行了患手的放射学检查。在排除不完整的数据集和应用设定的排除标准后,分析了 105 例患者的完整数据。
74 例患者为女性,31 例为男性,平均 BMI 存在显著差异[ p = 0.002;女性:23.8(SD±3.3),男性:26.2(SD±3.9)]。BMI 较高的患者骨折严重程度显著更高( p = 0.042)。然而,骨折管理的手术时间没有显著差异。在随访时,BMI 较低的患者骨折侧和对侧手部的握力差异较小( p = 0.017)。BMI 对临床和放射学结果没有显著影响。
尽管 BMI 对骨骼系统的影响具有矛盾性,但我们的研究结果表明,较高的 BMI 与更严重的 DRF 相关。因此,BMI 与骨折治疗的手术时间无关。此外,没有发现 BMI 对临床和放射学结果有影响的证据。