학술논문

Zone I Revision Finger Amputations Performed in the Emergency Department Compared With Those Performed in the Operating Room
FEATURE ARTICLE
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Orthopedics. October 2023, p1, 5 p.
Subject
Research
Comparative analysis
Health aspects
Amputation -- Research -- Health aspects -- Comparative analysis
Hospital emergency services -- Research -- Health aspects -- Comparative analysis
Hospitals -- Emergency service
Language
English
ISSN
0147-7447
Abstract
Fingertip injuries are a common cause of visits to the emergency department (ED), with approximately 4.8 million such visits per year. (1,2) A recent epidemiology study identified an incidence of [...]
Finger amputations are commonly encountered. These may be revised in the emergency department (ED) or the operating room (OR). Previous studies have demonstrated the cost-effectiveness associated with procedures performed in the ED. Patient outcomes have not been described. We retrospectively reviewed patients who presented to our level 1 trauma center with a traumatic partial or complete finger amputation through flexor tendon zone I. All were treated with revision amputation performed in either the ED or the OR between January 2012 and December 2017. A total of 172 patient charts were included. Ninety-three of the revision amputations were performed in the ED, while 79 were performed in the OR. There was no difference in age, race, sex, having a manual labor job, medical comorbidities, or mechanism of injury between the groups. Compared with procedures performed in the ED, procedures performed in the OR had a higher rate of delayed healing, a longer stay in the hospital, and a higher referral to therapy postoperatively. Length of follow-up and number of follow-up visits were not statistically different based on location of procedure. There was no difference in post-procedural infection rate or need for revision procedure between the groups. Our data support the efficacy of performing revision amputation procedures in the ED. Recorded patient complications and subsequent treatment after revision amputations performed in the ED vs the OR were comparable. Those performed in the ED potentially decrease the burden placed on the patient and the health care system. [Orthopedics. 202x;4x(x):xx–xx.]