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1.
Int Orthop ; 2024 Aug 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39143425

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Fractures and dislocations of the pelvic ring are complex injuries that when treating require meticulous attention to detail and often specialized technical skill. These injuries can be the result of high-energy trauma, particularly in younger patients, or low energy trauma more often found in the elderly. Regardless of mechanism, these injuries lie on a spectrum of severity and can be treated conservatively or surgically. Percutaneous fixation under fluoroscopic guidance is the preferred standard technique when treating these fractures. This technique can be challenging for a variety of reasons including patient characteristics, intra-operative image quality, fracture morphology, among others. METHODS: This retrospective study evaluated the use of intra-operative computed tomography (CT) using an O-arm imaging system for critical evaluation of fluoroscopic-guided screw placement in twenty-three patients. We retrospectively reviewed all cases of patients who were treated by three fellowship-trained orthopaedic traumatologists during a one-year span. Patients undergoing percutaneous pelvis fixation using both standard fluoroscopy and intraoperative CT with the Medtronic O-arm® (Minneapolis, MN) imaging system. Additionally, procedures performed included open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) of the pelvic ring, acetabulum, and associated extremity fractures. RESULTS: Twenty-three patients were included in this study. On average, the use of intraoperative CT added 24.4 min in operative time. Five patients (21.7%) required implant adjustment after O-arm spin. Fourteen patients underwent additional post-operative CT. No secondary revision surgeries were attempted after any post-operative CT. CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggests that intra-operative CT scan, compared to post-operative CT scan, can be utilized to prevent take-back surgery for misplaced implants and allow for adjustment in real-time.

2.
Recurso educacional aberto em Inglês | CVSP - Brasil | ID: cfc-198189

RESUMO

Relatório elaborado por Oren Ahoobim ; Daniel Altman ; Laurie Garrett ; Vicky Hausman ; Yanzhong Huang, publicado em abril de 2012.

Realizing the benefits of UHC for households is a formidable challenge.
Not only do the political, legislative, and regulatory hurdles to launching a UHC program need to be overcome; the program needs to be implemented and fine-tuned in ways that respond to the behavior of the targeted population, as well as other economic and health-related
trends. No one country has a UHC program that is viewed as a model for the entire world. Rather, governments and their partners seeking to implement UHC need to use a combination of insights from a collection of countries operating in similar contexts. Evidence underlining the benefits of UHC continues to accrue, especially as the introduction of UHC is increasingly designed with controlled trials in mind. Of course, because no two systems are identical, positive results in one country will not necessarily imply success in another. Yet even the evidence collected to date makes a strong case for UHC as a way to cut costs, reduce financial hardship, and potentially improve health.
 


Assuntos
Cobertura Universal de Saúde , Agenda de Prioridades em Saúde
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