The document discusses general principles of fracture management. It defines fractures and classifies them based on whether the skin is broken (open vs closed) and the mechanism of injury. Treatment approaches are also summarized, including splinting, definitive treatments like casting, plating or external fixation, and rehabilitation. Open fractures require additional initial management steps like antibiotics and wound care before definitive treatment.
2. DEFINITION OF FRACTURE
• A FRACTURE IS A BREAK IN THE STRUCTURAL CONTINUITY OF THE
BONE.
• THE BREAK IS INCOMPLETE/COMPLETE, AND THE BONE FRAGMENTS
MAY BE DISPLACED/UNDISPLACED.
3. THE DEFINITION OF FRACTURE
• FRACTURE IS A SOFT TISSUE INJURY WHERE THE BONE IS BROKEN.
4. THE FUNDAMENTALS OF FRACTURE
CLASSIFICATION
•IF THE OVERLYING SKIN REMAINS INTACT IT IS A CLOSED (OR SIMPLE)
FRACTURE
• IF THE SKIN OR ONE OF THE BODY CAVITIES IS BREACHED IT IS AN
OPEN (OR COMPOUND) FRACTURE
7. FATIGUE OR STRESS FRACTURES
• BONE , LIKE OTHER MATERIALS , REACTS TO REPEATED LOADING .
• ON OCCASION , IT BECOMES FATIGUED & A CRACK DEVELOPS .
• MILITARY INSTALLATIONS , BALLET DANCERS & ATHLETES.
• A SIMILAR PROBLEM OCCURS IN INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE ON
MEDICATION THAT ALTERS THE NORMAL BALANCE OF BONE
RESORPTION AND REPLACEMENT
• PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC INFLAMMATORY DISEASES WHO ARE ON
TREATMENT WITH STEROIDS OR METHOTREXATE
8. PATHOLOGICAL FRACTURES
• FRACTURES MAY OCCUR EVEN WITH NORMAL STRESSES IF THE BONE
HAS BEEN WEAKENED BY A CHANGE IN ITS STRUCTURE.
• IN OSTEOPOROSIS, OSTEOGENESIS IMPERFECTA OR PAGET’S DISEASE.
• OR THROUGH A LYTIC LESION.
• A BONE CYST OR A METASTASIS.
10. WRAPPING UP CLASSIFICATION….
• ANATOMICAL LOCATION
• CONDITION OF OVERLYING SOFT TISSUE
• DIRECTION OF FRACTURE LINE
• MECHANISM OF INJURY
• WHETHER THE FRACTURE IS LINEAR OR
COMMINUTED
11. THE CLINICAL DIAGNOSIS OF A FRACTURE
• HISTORY OF TRAUMA
• SYMPTOMS AND SIGNS:
1. PAIN AND TENDERNESS
2. SWELLING
3. DEFORMITY
4. BONY CREPITUS
5. LOSS OF FUNCTION
6. NERVE AND VASCULAR INJURY
12. THE RADIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS OF A
FRACTURE
• X-RAY:
• SHOULD SHOW JOINT ABOVE AND JOINT BELOW IN AT LEAST 2 VIEWS, SPECIAL VIEW ON
REQUEST.
• CT SCAN
• MRI:
IT IS NOT HELPFUL IN FRACTURE DIAGNOSIS OTHER THAN DELINEATING ASSOCIATED
INJURIES TO THE CNS , SUBTROCHANTERIC (ST) DISRUPTION OR OCCASIONALLY FATIGUE
FRACTURE
14. TREATMENT OF CLOSED FRACTURES
•EMERGENCY CARE (SPLINTING)
•DEFINITIVE FRACTURE TREATMENT
•REHABILITATION (MUSCLE ACTIVITY AND EARLY WEIGHT BEARING ARE
ENCOURAGED.
15. SPLINTING
•SPLINT THEM WHERE THEY LIE.
•ADEQUATE SPLINTING IS DESIRABLE.
•TYPE OF SPLINTS:
1.IMPROVISED
2.CONVENTIONAL
16. DEFINITIVE FRACTURE TREATMENT
• THE GOAL OF FRACTURE TREATMENT IS TO OBTAIN UNION OF THE
FRACTURE IN THE MOST ANATOMICAL POSITION COMPATIBLE WITH
MAXIMAL FUNCTIONAL RETURN OF THE EXTREMITY
• 2 TYPES OF DEFINITIVE FRACTURE TREATMENT:CONSERVATIVE AND
SURGICAL
17. CONSERVATIVE FRACTURE TREATMENT
• REDUCTION: IF DISPLACED UNDER GENERAL
ANASTHESIA, THE SOONER THE BETTER
• STEPS OF REDUCTION: • TRACTION • ALIGN (WHICH
FRAGMENT) • REVERSE MECHANISM OF INJURY
• IMMOBILIZATION: POP (PLASTER OF PARIS) CAST,
SLAB, TRACTION (FIXED OR BALANCED)
• REHABILITATION
19. OPEN REDUCTION INDICATIONS
•OPERATIVE REDUCTION OF THE FRACTURE IS INDICATED:
1.WHEN CLOSED REDUCTION FAILS
2.WHEN THERE IS A LARGE ARTICULAR FRAGMENT THAT NEEDS
ACCURATE POSITIONING
3.FOR TRACTION (AVULSION) FRACTURES IN WHICH THE FRAGMENTS
ARE HELD APART
20. INTERNAL FIXATION INDICATION
• 1. FRACTURES THAT CANNOT BE REDUCED EXCEPT BY OPERATION
• 2. FRACTURES THAT ARE INHERENTLY UNSTABLE AND PRONE TO RE-
DISPLACE AFTER REDUCTION
• 3. FRACTURES THAT UNITE POORLY AND SLOWLY
• 4. PATHOLOGICAL FRACTURES IN WHICH BONE DISEASE MAY
PREVENT HEALING
• 5. MULTIPLE FRACTURES WHERE EARLY FIXATION REDUCES THE RISK
OF GENERAL COMPLICATIONS.
• 6. FRACTURES IN PATIENTS WHO PRESENT NURSING DIFFICULTIES
21. EXTERNAL FIXATION
• INDICATIONS:
1. FRACTURES ASSOCIATED WITH SEVERE SOFT-TISSUE DAMAGE
(INCLUDING OPEN FRACTURES) OR THOSE THAT ARE
CONTAMINATED
2. FRACTURES AROUND JOINTS THAT ARE POTENTIALLY SUITABLE FOR
INTERNAL FIXATION BUT THE SOFT TISSUES ARE TOO SWOLLEN TO
ALLOW SAFE SURGERY
3. PATIENTS WITH SEVERE MULTIPLE INJURIES
4. UNUNITED FRACTURES, WHICH CAN BE EXCISED AND COMPRESSED
5. INFECTED FRACTURES
22. REHABILITATION
• RESTORE FUNCTION – NOT ONLY TO THE INJURED PARTS BUT ALSO TO
THE PATIENT AS A WHOLE
THE OBJECTIVES ARE:
1. TO REDUCE OEDEMA
2. PRESERVE JOINT MOVEMENT
3. RESTORE MUSCLE POWER
4. GUIDE THE PATIENT BACK TO NORMAL ACTIVITY
23. TREATMENT OF OPEN FRACTURES
•INITIAL MANAGEMENT
•CLASSIFYING THE INJURY
•DEFINITIVE TREATMENT
24. INITIAL MANAGEMENT
• IT IS ESSENTIAL THAT THE STEP-BY-STEP APPROACH IN ADVANCED
TRAUMA LIFE SUPPORT NOT BE FORGOTTEN
• WHEN THE FRACTURE IS READY TO BE DEALT WITH:
1. THE WOUND IS CAREFULLY INSPECTED
2. ANY GROSS CONTAMINATION IS REMOVED
3. THE WOUND IS PHOTOGRAPHED
4. THE AREA THEN COVERED WITH A SALINE-SOAKED DRESSING
5. THE PATIENT IS GIVEN ANTIBIOTICS
6. TETANUS PROPHYLAXIS IS ADMINISTERED
7. THE LIMB CIRCULATION AND DISTAL NEUROLOGICAL STATUS CHECKED
REPEATEDLY
25. CLASSIFYING THE INJURY WITH GUSTILO’S
CLASSIFICATION
• TYPE 1 – THE WOUND IS USUALLY A SMALL, CLEAN PUNCTURE
THROUGH WHICH A BONE SPIKE HAS PROTRUDED. THERE IS LITTLE
SOFT-TISSUE DAMAGE WITH NO CRUSHING AND THE FRACTURE IS NOT
COMMINUTED (I.E. A LOW-ENERGY FRACTURE).
• TYPE II – THE WOUND IS MORE THAN 1 CM LONG, BUT THERE IS NO
SKIN FLAP. THERE IS NOT MUCH SOFT-TISSUE DAMAGE AND NO MORE
THAN MODERATE CRUSHING OR COMMINUTION OF THE FRACTURE
(ALSO A LOW- TO MODERATEENERGY FRACTURE).
• TYPE III – THERE IS A LARGE LACERATION, EXTENSIVE DAMAGE TO
SKIN AND UNDERLYING SOFT TISSUE AND, IN THE MOST SEVERE
EXAMPLES, VASCULAR INJURY MAY ACCOMPANY THE FRCTURE.
26. GRADING THE SEVERITY OF TYPE III
FRACTURES.
• THERE ARE THREE GRADES OF SEVERITY:
• TYPE III A : THE FRACTURED BONE CAN BE ADEQUATELY COVERED BY
SOFT TISSUE DESPITE THE LACERATION.
• TYPE III B : THERE IS EXTENSIVE PERIOSTEAL STRIPPING AND
FRACTURE COVER IS NOT POSSIBLE WITHOUT USE OF LOCAL OR
DISTANT FLAPS.
• TYPE III C : THERE IS AN ARTERIAL INJURY THAT NEEDS TO BE
REPAIRED, REGARDLESS OF THE AMOUNT OF OTHER SOFT-TISSUE
DAMAGE.
27. PRINCIPLES OF TREATMENT
• ALL OPEN FRACTURES, NO MATTER HOW TRIVIAL THEY MAY SEEM,
MUST BE ASSUMED TO BE CONTAMINATED
• THE FOUR ESSENTIALS ARE:
1. ANTIBIOTIC PROPHYLAXIS.
2. URGENT WOUND AND FRACTURE DEBRIDEMENT.
3. STABILIZATION OF THE FRACTURE.
4. EARLY DEFINITIVE WOUND COVER.
28. AFTERCARE
• IN THE WARD, THE LIMB IS ELEVATED AND ITS CIRCULATION
CAREFULLY WATCHED.
• ANTIBIOTIC COVER IS CONTINUED BUT ONLY FOR A MAXIMUM OF 72
HOURS IN THE MORE SEVERE GRADES OF INJURY .
• WOUND CULTURES ARE SELDOM HELPFUL, IF IT WERE TO ENSUE, IS
OFTEN CAUSED BY HOSPITAL-DERIVED ORGANISMS.
30. INVICTUS-by William Ernest Henley
Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever the gods may be,
For my unconquerable soul.
In the fell clutch of circumstance,
I have not winced nor cried aloud.
Under the bludgeonings of fate,
My head is bloody, but unbowed.
Beyond this place of wrath and tears,
Looms but the Horror of the shade,
And yet the menace of the years,
Finds and shall find me unafraid.
It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll,
I am the master of my fate,
I am the captain of my soul.