Some of the most unexpected injuries in medicine are due to orthopaedic trauma, which involves problems related to bones, joints, and soft tissues. Discover what some of the most common orthopaedic trauma injuries are and how we treat them.
TRANSCRIPT
Intro: MedStar Washington Hospital Center presents Medical Intel where our healthcare team shares health and wellness insights and gives you the inside story on advances in medicine.
Host: We’re speaking with Dr. Robert Golden, Chief of Orthopaedic Trauma Surgery at MedStar Washington Hospital Center. Thanks for joining us, Dr. Golden.
Dr. Golden: Thanks a lot for having me.
Host: Today we’re discussing common orthopaedic trauma injuries which commonly affect bones, joints, ligaments, tendons and muscles, and how we diagnose and treat them at MedStar Washington Hospital Center. Dr. Golden, could you begin by explaining why orthopaedic trauma injuries generally occur?
Dr. Golden: Sure. They can occur from multiple different kinds of mechanisms, the most common being falls and motor vehicle crashes. But we also see a large number of injuries from bicycle related injuries, scooter related injuries. We also, in this area, see a fair number of gunshot wounds.
Host: What are some of the most common orthopaedic injuries that you see?
Dr. Golden: A lot of them depend on how the person was injured. We do see a fair amount of injuries from pedestrians being struck by cars. They tend to get injuries to their legs and lower extremities. A lot of people who just fall, and they can hurt anything including ankles and lower extremities, but then they also tend to have a lot of wrist injuries and shoulder injuries from falling and putting their arms out to protect them.
Host: And could you explain, giving specifics, some of those injuries?
Dr. Golden: Sure. A very common mechanism when you fall and you put your arm out is that you break what’s called your distal radius, which is just the bone at the end of your arm right before your wrist. It’s a very common injury in older people as well as in younger people when they suffer a high energy fall. Some of the injuries from the pedestrians being hit by cars involve what’s called a tibial plateau, which is the top part of your tibia, right below your knee. You can imagine the bumper of the car striking you on the side and that bumper is right about the level of your knee, so a lot of people get injuries that way. Once it gets a little warmer and people go back to motorcycles or riding bicycles, then you start to see a little more high energy injuries, especially from the motorcycles and those can involve injuries to your femur or your thigh bone. And, the higher energy crashes with motorcycles, and with cars, then you can get some of the pelvis injuries that people see. The other thing we’ll see is we’ll get patients referred in who have had complications from fractures that they’ve had in the past. Sometimes the fractures just don’t heal and then that’s called a nonunion. Sometimes they heal but they heal in a crooked position. So, we’ll also treat those patients. And, if they haven’t healed, a lot of times you need to figure out why that is. Sometimes that’s because the bone simply doesn’t have enough blood supply to it. Sometimes it’s because the patient doesn’t have the components necessary to actually heal that, be it enough vitamin D in their system or other reasons that can prevent bone healing. So, oftentimes we’ll have to take them back to the operating room and do other procedures to try to get them to heal, including taking some bone from another part of their body and bringing it into the area where it hasn’t healed. If they’ve healed but it healed crookedly, called a malunion, sometimes we’ll even have to re-break the bone or cut it at the area where it’s crooked - sometimes that can be done as a single procedure. Sometimes w
Information
- Show
- FrequencyUpdated weekly
- Published27 August 2019 at 13:41 UTC
- Length12 min
- Episode117
- RatingClean