Care of Elderly Hip Fractures Flashcards

1
Q

Where are some common sites for fragility fractures?

A

Neck of femur and humerus, wrist, vertebrae, pelvis

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2
Q

What is the ideal patient care outline?

A

Prompt admission to orthopaedic care and rapid comprehensive assessment
Minimal delay to surgery, and accurate and well-performed surgery
Prompt mobilisation and prevention of complications
Early multidisciplinary management rehabilitation
Early supported discharge
Secondary prevention including falls and bone health assessment

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3
Q

How quickly should a patient be admitted to an acute orthopaedic ward?

A

Within 4 hrs = rapid triage through A and E, rapid x-rays, minimise delays in reaching ward, avoid long periods on trolley

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4
Q

What are the big 6 interventions that all patients with suspected/confirmed hip fractures should get before leaving ED?

A
Analgesia (especially for x-ray)
Early warning score
Pressure area inspection
Blood tests
Fluid therapy
Delirium screening
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5
Q

What makes up the traditional model of pre-op analgesia?

A

Strong opioids (e.g morphine) = many side effects

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6
Q

What is the newer model for pre-op analgesia?

A

Local nerve blocks = can last intra and post=operatively, delivered in A and E

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7
Q

How is delirium recognised?

A

By confusion assessment method (CAM)

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8
Q

What makes up the confusion assessment method (CAM)?

A

Acute change/fluctuating cognitive level
Inattention
Altered conscious level or disorganised thinking
4AT tool helps in identification

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9
Q

What are some factors that influence delirium?

A

Predisposing factors = age, dementia
Precipitating factors = pain, drugs, constipation
Propagating factors = change in environment, constipation, infection

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10
Q

How is delirium treated?

A

Treat underlying cause (e.g infection)

Non-pharmacological methods = same nursing team, ensure orientation, use family

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11
Q

What should every patient with a hip fracture receive within 24hrs of admission?

A

Inpatient bundle of care = cognitive, neurological, nutritional, pressure areas, falls

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12
Q

When should all patients fit for surgery get to surgery?

A

Within 36hrs and during working hours

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13
Q

What should occur during the pre-operative period?

A

Assessment, investigations and treatments completed to get fit for surgery
Multidisciplinary communication
Scheduling of surgery and allowing for possible delays
Appropriate antibiotics prophylaxis

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14
Q

How does the orthopaedic surgeon assess the patient before surgery?

A

Senior review of patient and films, appropriate and decisive operative plan

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15
Q

How does the medical team assess the patient before surgery?

A

Assessment of fluid status and starting IV fluids, assessment and management of comorbidities, addressing any acute cause of falls, medication review

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16
Q

How does the anaesthetist assess the patient before surgery?

A

Suitability for type of anaesthetic, assessment of cardio/resp function, other significant comorbidites

17
Q

What are the regulations for fasting a patient before surgery?

A

No patient should be repeatedly fasted in preparation for surgery and oral fluids should be encouraged up to 2hrs prior to surgery

18
Q

What are the standard hip implants used?

A

Cemented hemi-arthroplasty implants (unless clinically indicated otherwise)

19
Q

When should every patient identified as being frail be assessed by?

A

Within three days of being admitted

20
Q

What makes up a comprehensive geriatric assessment?

A

Ongoing analgesia
Fluid and electrolyte management including blood transfusions
Comorbid condition management including medication review
Prevention, identification and management of delirium
Prevention of complications = DVT, infection, pressure ulcers
Early identification and treatment of complications
Falls assessment

21
Q

What are the syndromes which indicate frailty?

A

Falls, immobility, delirium, incontinence, susceptibility to side effects of medication

22
Q

How does the CSHA frailty scale work?

A

Scores patients from 1 (very fit) to 7 (severely frail)

23
Q

How soon can pressure ulcers begin to develop?

A

After 30 mins of lying on a hard surface = cause pain and immobility limiting rehab, must closely monitor for onset

24
Q

What are risk factors for pressure ulcers?

A

Delays to surgery, frail/malnourished patients, failure to mobilise

25
Q

What are the main principles of fluid management?

A
Peri-operative period is critical
Danger of fluid overloading
Continual clinical assessment
Appropriate choice of fluids
Resuscitation vs maintenance
26
Q

When is pain control needed?

A

On admission, on transferring to x-ray, pre/intra/post-operatively

27
Q

What is the recommended guidelines for pain management post-operatively?

A

WHO pain ladder

28
Q

What are some options for pain management post-operatively?

A

Paracetamol is rarely enough
NSAIDs rarely tolerated
Opiate analgesics can cause drowsiness, confusion, constipation and dizziness

29
Q

What is the step by step approach to analgesia?

A
1 = paracetamol regularly oral or IV
2 = codeine starting at 15mg dose but can be increased
3 = morphine as required or regular oxycodone if confused on morphine, maybe small doses of both
30
Q

Where should fall assessment be carried out?

A

Started in orthopaedic ward

Often completed at falls clinic post-op if discharged early into community

31
Q

How should patients be examined in a fall assessment?

A

Visual assessment
Cardio, neurology and MSK/gait assessment
Medication review
ECG +/- further investigation

32
Q

What should have occurred by the end of the first two days after surgery?

A

Mobilisation should have begun by end of the first day

Every patient should have physio assessment by end of second day

33
Q

When should patients with a hip fracture be seen by OT for assessment?

A

By end of day 3 post-admission

34
Q

What should every patient with a hip fracture have before they leave the acute orthopaedic unit?

A

Assessment of their bone health

35
Q

How is bone health assessed?

A

Basic assessment should be done whilst inpatient (with follow-up arrangement)
Calcium/vitamin D intake should be assessed (most get supplemented)
Dual x-ray bone densitometry if required as out-patient
Antiresorptive therapy

36
Q

What are some antiresorptive therapies?

A

Oral (alendronic acid) once weekly, second line treatments include IV bisphosphates or denosumab

37
Q

When is the aim to have patients discharged by?

A

Within 30 days of the admission date = recovery should be optimised by multi-disciplinary team approach

38
Q

When should patients be transferred to MFE assessment and rehabilitation unit if needed?

A

After 72hrs