Open-Book Pelvic Fractures with Perineal Open Wounds: A Significant Morbid Combination

Author:

Duchesne Juan C.1,Bharmal Husain M.1,Dini Arash A.1,Islam Tareq1,Schmieg Robert E.2,Simmons Jon D.2,Wahl Georgia M.1,Davis John A.3,Krause Peter4,Mcswain Norman E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana; the

2. Department of Surgery, The University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi; the

3. Department of Orthopedics, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana; and the

4. Department of Orthopedics, Louisiana State University, New Orleans, Louisiana

Abstract

Open-book pelvic fractures (OBPF) with concomitant intra-abdominal injuries carry a high morbidity and mortality; the significance of associated perineal open wound (OBPF-POW) has not been defined. We hypothesize that the presence of perineal open wounds increases morbidity, mortality, and concomitant use of hospital resources. Patients diagnosed with OBPF over a 5-year period at a Level I trauma center were identified by trauma registry review, and were retrospectively reviewed under an Institutional Review Board-approved protocol. Patients with OBPF without a perineal open wound were compared with those with OBPF-POW. Data collected included patient demographics, injury details, management, and outcomes. A total of 1,635 patients with blunt pelvic fractures were identified, of which 177 (10.8%) had OBPF. OBPF-POW (36/177) significantly increased the use of angioembolization, occurrence of sepsis, pelvic sepsis, ARDS, and multi-organ system failure. Patients with OBPF-POW had an increase of 13 days in length of hospitalization compared with the OBPF group ( P < 0.001), with cost of $120,647.30 and $62,952.72 respectively ( P < 0.001). Perineal open wounds complicate open-book pelvic fractures with significant increase in hospital resource utilization. Aggressive multidisciplinary evaluation and management is appropriate to detect and prevent complications.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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