Open Fractures and Nerve Injury Flashcards
(3 cards)
1
Q
What are the different types of open fracture?
A
- 1 - <1cm wound and clean
- 2 - 1-10cm wound anc clean
- 3A - >10cm wound and high energy, bnut with adequate soft tissue coverage
- 3B - >10cm wound and high-energy, but with inadequate soft tissue coverage
- 3C - all injuries with vascular injury
2
Q
What are the classifications of peripheral nerve injury?
A
- Neuropraxia (Class I)
- Temporary interruption of conduction without loss of axonal continuity.
- Physiological block of nerve conduction in the affected axons.
- Mildest type of peripheral nerve injury
- Endoneurium, perineurium and epineurium are intact.
- No wallerian degeneration.
- Conduction normal except in specific area of injury.
- Recover is full.
- EMG shows fibrillation potentials and positive sharp waves.
- Axonotmesis (Class II)
- Involves loss of the relative continuity of the axon and it’s covering of myelin, but preservation of the connective tissue framework of the nerve (epineurim and perineurium are preserved)
- Wallerian degeneration distal to injury.
- Sensory and motor deficits distal to injury.
- No nerve conduction distal to site of injury (3-4 days after injury).
- EMG shows fibrillation potentials and positive sharp waves (2-3 weeks post injury).
- Axonal regeneration and recovery possible without surgery.
- Neurotmesis (Class III)
- Total severance or disruption of the entire nerve fibre.
- Wallerian degeneration distal to site of injury.
- Connective tissue lesion may be partial or complete.
- Sensory-motor problems and autonomic function defect are severe.
- EMG and NCV findings are axonotmesis.
- Surgical intervention necessary.
3
Q
Management of open fractures
A
- Antibiotics and dressings
- Administer prophylactic IV antibiotics immediately to patients with open fractures
- Consider saline-soaked dressing covered with an occlusive layer
- Do not irrigate open fractures of long bones, hindfoot or midfoot before debridement
- Debridement, fixation and cover
- Surgery to achieve debridement, fixation and cover should be performed concurrently between orthopedics and plastic surgery
- Debridement
- Immediately for contaminated open fractures
- Within 12 hours for high energy that are not contaminated
- Within 24 hours for all other open fractures
- Fixation and definitive soft tissue cover
- At same time if list allows
- Within 72 hours if not
- Amputation
- If limb is source of life-threatening, uncontrollable bleeding
- If attempted preservation would pose unacceptable risk to life
- If limb is deemed unsalvagable
- Pain relief
- IV morphine is first line
- If no IV access intranasal route for diamorphine or ketamine
- Photographic documentation may be required in relation to local policy