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General Orthopaedics

ARE CLINICAL OUTCOMES WORSE POST ELECTIVE FOOT AND ANKLE SURGERY IN OBESE PATIENTS?

Combined Services Orthopaedic Society (CSOS) - 32nd Meeting



Abstract

Primary Care Trusts across the country are being encouraged to ration service provision due to austerity measures. Obesity has been suggested as a rationing tool with poor clinical outcomes sited as justification. There is, however, a lack of evidence in the literature pertaining to clinical outcomes post elective foot and ankle surgery in patients with an increased Body Mass Index (BMI).

All patients undergoing elective foot and ankle surgery at Queen Alexandra Hospital, Portsmouth are entered into a prospective database, which includes their BMI at time of assessment in clinic. From this, we analysed the notes of all patients with a BMI ≥30, excluding any not operated on between July 2007 and August 2009 or with a BMI of <30 at time of surgery, to determine whether there was an increased incidence of peri- or post-operative complications.

Included in the study were 109 patients with a mean age of 54 (range 21 - 79). Female patients accounted for 63% of those notes reviewed and the mean BMI was 34 (range 30 - 50). A mixture of hindfoot and forefoot procedures were carried out (20 different procedures). Median length of stay was 0 nights (range 0 – 15 days). The causes for excessive length of stays (>4 nights) included a pre operative Lower Respiratory Tract Infection missed prior to intubation and the initiation of CPAP post operatively in a patient with known Obstructive Sleep Apnoea. We found 3 cases of post operative Venous Thrombo-embolism within 3 months of surgery and 1 proven wound infection in a non-insulin dependent diabetic patient. Also noted were 3 non-unions, all requiring further surgery.

Based on our historical evidence of infective and thrombo-embolic complications in patients with a BMI <30, we conclude that peri- and post-operative complications in obese patients occur no more frequently than in a patient population with a BMI <30.