Fb. Rogers et al., PROMPT FIXATION OF ISOLATED FEMUR FRACTURES IN A RURAL TRAUMA CENTER - A STUDY EXAMINING THE TIMING OF FIXATION AND RESOURCE-ALLOCATION, The journal of trauma, injury, infection, and critical care, 36(6), 1994, pp. 774-777
Early fixation is defined by most authors as fracture fixation within
24 hours of admission. This definition of early is arbitrary and may n
ot be achievable in a rural environment where interhospital transfer i
s often required and operating room resources are constrained. A revie
w of isolated femur fractures was performed to determine if prompt fix
ation (24-72 hours, Early) was more effective than late fixation (>72
hours, Late) and similar to immediate fixation (<24 hours, Immediate)
with regard to complications, mortality, and resource utilization. Bet
ween October 1, 1987 and December 31, 1990, 67 patients were admitted
and stratified into one of the three groups based on the timing of fix
ation. The number of emergency operations was significantly greater in
the Immediate group and the surgery took significantly longer to perf
orm than in either the Early or Late groups (p < 0.004; ANOVA). There
were significantly fewer pulmonary and infectious complications in the
Immediate and Early groups compared with the Late group (p < 0.05, ch
i2). Fixation of isolated femur fractures after 24 hours but before 72
hours had morbidity similar to fixation within the first 24 hours, bu
t utilized operating room resources more efficiently.