Autor: |
Rafael Marti-Ciruelos, Juan Pretell-Mazzini, Angel Curto de la Mano, José Luis González-López, Eva Maria Andres-Esteban, Victor Rodriguez-Vega, Jorge Muñoz-Ledesma |
Rok vydání: |
2012 |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Journal of children's orthopaedics. 6(4) |
ISSN: |
1863-2521 |
Popis: |
Purpose The aim of our study is to report our complication rate and analyze the associated risk factors when removing cannulated stainless steel screws for SCFE fixation. Methods This was a multicenter retrospective study of patients who underwent removal of cannulated stainless steel screws after a mean time of 2.03 years of implantation. Thirty-two patients were included (38 hips) with a mean of 13.7 years of age during screw removal surgery. The mean post-removal follow up time was 1.6 years. In all cases the removal of screws was done systematically. Demographic data, possible risk factors related to removal failure, as well as post-removal complications such as post-removal fractures, infections and scar issues were recorded. Results A removal failure rate of 15.79 % (6/38) was found. The removal surgical time was longer than the initial fixation time but without statistical significance (70.78 vs 61.84 m, p = 0.196). However, the duration of screw implantation ( r2: 7.09; IC: 1.12–13.06) and screw head bony coverage ( r2: 21.32; IC: 5.58–37.06) were both related to this prolonged time. Multivariant analysis revealed that a fully threaded cannulated screw had the lowest removal failure risk (OR: 0.3; IC: 0.14–0.61). There were no postremoval complications recorded. Conclusions We recommend to use full threaded cannulated stainless steel screws and to perform the procedure as soon as the physis are closed to decrease the surgical time. It is a safe procedure based on a low rate of complications such as post-removal fractures, infection and scar issues. |
Databáze: |
OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |
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