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The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 98-B, Issue 3 | Pages 420 - 424
1 Mar 2016
Wordsworth M Lawton G Nathwani D Pearse M Naique S Dodds A Donaldson H Bhattacharya R Jain A Simmons J Hettiaratchy S

Aims

The management of open lower limb fractures in the United Kingdom has evolved over the last ten years with the introduction of major trauma networks (MTNs), the publication of standards of care and the wide acceptance of a combined orthopaedic and plastic surgical approach to management. The aims of this study were to report recent changes in outcome of open tibial fractures following the implementation of these changes.

Patients and Methods

Data on all patients with an open tibial fracture presenting to a major trauma centre between 2011 and 2012 were collected prospectively. The treatment and outcomes of the 65 Gustilo Anderson Grade III B tibial fractures were compared with historical data from the same unit.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_26 | Pages 12 - 12
1 Jun 2013
Wordsworth M Lawton G Simmonds J Hettiaratchy S
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St Mary's Hospital, the major trauma centre for West London, treated 168 patients with lower limb open fractures in 2011 & 2012. This audit compared antibiotic administration in the emergency department against the current BOAST IV guidelines.

The choice, timing, dose, and documentation of antibiotic administration was collected from the casualty cards and the transfer documentation for any patient initially seen at another hospital. The severity of the injury (as the Gusitollo-Anderson classification) after the initial debridement and any infectious complications that presented before discharge were also recorded.

The results showed a higher compliance with the BOAST IV guidelines for those patients directly admitted rather than transferred to the major trauma centre. In direct admissions the recommended antibiotics were either not given or not adequately documented in 7% of cases. In those patients transferred from another emergency department the documentation was inadequate in 27% of cases.

The likely causes of these results are discussed alongside the unit's bone infection rates.