Geriatric trauma hip fractures: is there a difference in outcomes based on fracture patterns?

Annually in the US, there are over 300,000 hospital admissions due to hip fractures in geriatric patients. Consequently, there have been several large observational studies, which continue to provide new insights into differences in outcomes among hip fracture patients. However, few hip fracture stu...

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Veröffentlicht in:World journal of emergency surgery 2014-12, Vol.9 (1), p.59-59, Article 59
Hauptverfasser: Mangram, Alicia, Moeser, Phillip, Corneille, Michael G, Prokuski, Laura J, Zhou, Nicolas, Sohn, Jacqueline, Chaliki, Shalini, Oguntodu, Olakunle F, Dzandu, James K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Annually in the US, there are over 300,000 hospital admissions due to hip fractures in geriatric patients. Consequently, there have been several large observational studies, which continue to provide new insights into differences in outcomes among hip fracture patients. However, few hip fracture studies have specifically examined the relationship between hip fracture patterns, sex, and short-term outcomes including hospital length of stay and discharge disposition in geriatric trauma patients. We performed a retrospective study of hip fractures in geriatric trauma patients. Hip fracture patterns were based on ICD -9 CM diagnostic codes for hip fractures (820.00-820.9). Patient variables were patient demographics, mechanism of injury, injury severity score, hospital and ICU length of stay, co-morbidities, injury location, discharge disposition, and in-patient mortality. A total of 325 patient records met the inclusion criteria. The mean age of the patients was 82.2 years, and the majority of the patients were white (94%) and female (70%). Hip fractures patterns were categorized as two fracture classes and three fracture types. We observed a difference in the proportion of males to females within each fracture class (Femoral neck fractures Z-score = -8.86, p 
ISSN:1749-7922
1749-7922
DOI:10.1186/1749-7922-9-59