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Reinhard, Jan ; Schindler, Melanie ; Straub, Josina ; Baertl, Susanne ; Szymski, Dominik ; Walter, Nike ; Lang, Siegmund ; Alt, Volker ; Rupp, Markus

Timing in orthopaedic surgery – Rethinking traditional myths with a critical perspective

Reinhard, Jan , Schindler, Melanie, Straub, Josina, Baertl, Susanne , Szymski, Dominik , Walter, Nike , Lang, Siegmund , Alt, Volker and Rupp, Markus (2025) Timing in orthopaedic surgery – Rethinking traditional myths with a critical perspective. Injury 56 (3), p. 112165.

Date of publication of this fulltext: 05 Jun 2025 04:15
Article
DOI to cite this document: 10.5283/epub.76800


Abstract

Purpose Standard operating procedures aim to achieve a standardized and assumedly high-quality therapy. However, in orthopaedic surgery, the aspect of temporal urgency is often based on surgical tradition and experience. At a time of evidence-based medicine, it is necessary to question these temporal guidelines. The following review will therefore address the most important temporal guidelines ...

Purpose
Standard operating procedures aim to achieve a standardized and assumedly high-quality therapy. However, in orthopaedic surgery, the aspect of temporal urgency is often based on surgical tradition and experience. At a time of evidence-based medicine, it is necessary to question these temporal guidelines. The following review will therefore address the most important temporal guidelines in orthopaedic surgery and discuss their practical relevance and potential need for optimization.
Methods
The systematic review features a literature review by database search in “PubMed” (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) for time to surgery in terms of (1) “proximal femoral fractures”, (2) “femoral neck fractures”, (3) “proximal humeral fractures”, (4) “ligament and tendon injuries”, (5) “spinal cord injuries”, (6) “open fractures” and (7) “fracture-related infections”. For every diagnosis, hypotheses on timing were set up and checked for evidence.
Results
There is solid clinical evidence supporting the initiation of treatment within 24 h for specific conditions like the surgical treatment of proximal femur fractures and prompt decompression of spinal cord injuries. However, for other scenarios such as the 6-hour rule for open fractures, joint-preserving femoral neck fractures, timing of ligament injuries, humeral head fractures and fracture-related infections there is currently no reliable evidence to guide prompt surgical treatment.
Conclusion
Based on the current data, resource-adapted surgical planning seems reasonable. Further research in these areas is necessary to determine the best timing of treatment and address existing doubts.



Involved Institutions


Details

Item typeArticle
Journal or Publication TitleInjury
Publisher:Elsevier
Volume:56
Number of Issue or Book Chapter:3
Page Range:p. 112165
Date19 January 2025
InstitutionsMedicine > Lehrstuhl für Unfallchirurgie
Medicine > Lehrstuhl für Orthopädie
Identification Number
ValueType
10.1016/j.injury.2025.112165DOI
KeywordsTiming in orthopaedic surgery, Time to surgery, Orthopaedic myths, Proximal femoral fractures, Femoral neck fractures, Proximal humeral fractures, Ligament and tendon injuries, Spinal cord injuries, Open fractures, Fracture-related infections
Dewey Decimal Classification600 Technology > 610 Medical sciences Medicine
StatusPublished
RefereedYes, this version has been refereed
Created at the University of RegensburgPartially
URN of the UB Regensburgurn:nbn:de:bvb:355-epub-768003
Item ID76800

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