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Published in: European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery 4/2021

01-08-2021 | Radius Fracture | Original Article

Perception of quality of intraoperative fluoroscopy and the influence on postoperative management: an international survey

Authors: Florian Oehme, Konrad Schütze, Björn Christian Link, Herman Frima, Tim Schepers, Steven Rhemrev, Mark Rickman, Reto Babst, Frank Joseph Paulus Beeres

Published in: European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery | Issue 4/2021

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Abstract

Purpose

Intraoperative precise visualization of fractures and assessment of the quality of reduction is essential in orthopedic trauma surgery. Fluoroscopic skills will lead to an increased detection rate of minimal abnormalities needing revision intraoperatively. The definition of fluoroscopic skills and the interpretation of acceptable “minimal abnormalities” remains somehow unclear. The purpose of this study was to analyze the subjective quality assessment of intraoperative radiographs (IR) and whether they are influenced by cultural and demographic factors. Furthermore, we aimed to answer the question whether the indication for revision surgery is international comparable or rather influenceable by cultural aspects.

Methods

Intraoperative radiographs of 30 patients operated for an ankle or radius fracture were selected for an international survey. In total, 22 patients were randomly selected from an already existing database and eligible for inclusion if reduction was accomplished during initial operation without planed revision. Eight patients of this group had undergone an unplanned revision surgery (26.6%). Fifteen orthopedic trauma surgeons from three different countries answered this survey. All raters were senior consultants.

Results

The quality of reduction was rated as good in both the AP (7.95 of 10) and lateral (7.84 of 10) views. The inter-observer reliability was substantially weaker in Country B (kappa of 0.23) compared to Countries A (p value < 0.05) and C (range 0.33–0.43). In only 33% of the cases the raters requested a postoperative radiograph. This was significantly fewer (p value < 0.001) in Country A. The frequency of postoperative requested CT’s was comparable between the countries.

Conclusion

This study showed acceptable IR assessment in terms of quality rating. Furthermore, it revealed substantial differences in the postoperative decision-making process in different countries, especially regarding the necessity for postoperative radiographs. This suggests that definition for indication of revision surgery is culturally influenced.
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Metadata
Title
Perception of quality of intraoperative fluoroscopy and the influence on postoperative management: an international survey
Authors
Florian Oehme
Konrad Schütze
Björn Christian Link
Herman Frima
Tim Schepers
Steven Rhemrev
Mark Rickman
Reto Babst
Frank Joseph Paulus Beeres
Publication date
01-08-2021
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery / Issue 4/2021
Print ISSN: 1863-9933
Electronic ISSN: 1863-9941
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00068-019-01286-z

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