Use of Multislice CT for Investigation of Occult Geriatric Hip Fractures and Impact on Timing of Surgery

Introduction: The National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence guidelines in the United Kingdom recommend magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as the first-line investigation for radiographically occult hip fractures, if available within 24 hours. In our department, however, multislice computeri...

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Main Authors: John Williams MRCS, Felix Allen MBBS, Marta Kedrzycki MRCS, Yathish Shenava FRCS (Tr & orth), Renu Gupta FRCR
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-01-01
Series:Geriatric Orthopaedic Surgery & Rehabilitation
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2151459318821214
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spelling doaj-046aaf6a90fe4b4794c034c664992fc72020-11-25T03:43:28ZengSAGE PublishingGeriatric Orthopaedic Surgery & Rehabilitation2151-45932019-01-011010.1177/2151459318821214Use of Multislice CT for Investigation of Occult Geriatric Hip Fractures and Impact on Timing of SurgeryJohn Williams MRCS0Felix Allen MBBS1Marta Kedrzycki MRCS2Yathish Shenava FRCS (Tr & orth)3Renu Gupta FRCR4 Department of Trauma & Orthopaedics, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, London, United Kingdom Department of Trauma & Orthopaedics, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, London, United Kingdom Department of Trauma & Orthopaedics, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, London, United Kingdom Department of Trauma & Orthopaedics, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, London, United Kingdom Department of Radiology, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, London, United KingdomIntroduction: The National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence guidelines in the United Kingdom recommend magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as the first-line investigation for radiographically occult hip fractures, if available within 24 hours. In our department, however, multislice computerized tomography (MSCT) is instead used as a first-line investigation due to significant delays associated with obtaining MRI. Our aim was to determine the validity and practicality of MSCT for diagnosis of occult hip fractures and its impact on timing of surgery. Materials and Methods: We retrospectively analyzed medical records and imaging for consecutive patients who underwent MSCT to investigate occult hip fractures between January 2014 and October 2016. We reviewed subsequent imaging and reattendances for patients with negative MSCT to exclude initially missed fractures. Results: Two hundred six patients underwent MSCT to investigate occult hip fracture during the study period. Hip fractures were identified in 59 patients, comprising 35 (59.3%) subcapital, 12 (20.0%) intertrochanteric, 8 (13.6%) transcervical, and 4 (6.8%) basicervical fractures. One missed hip fracture was identified: a patient with a negative MSCT was further investigated with MRI that demonstrated acute subcapital hip fracture. Multislice computerized tomography was obtained within 24 hours of initial radiograph in 145 (70.4%) patients. A total of 44.5% of occult hip fractures had surgery within the nationally recommended 36 hours of admission (hospital average for all hip fractures was 76.4% over the same period). Discussion and Conclusions: Multislice computerized tomography is a pragmatic approach to investigate the majority of occult hip fractures in a timely manner and minimize associated delay to surgery. However it cannot completely exclude the diagnosis, especially in abnormal anatomy. The lack of a true gold standard comparison (ie, MRI) means a true sensitivity and specificity cannot be calculated, although can be cautiously estimated by lack of subsequent reattendance or investigation. Further prospective randomized CT versus MRI trials are required.https://doi.org/10.1177/2151459318821214
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Williams MRCS
Felix Allen MBBS
Marta Kedrzycki MRCS
Yathish Shenava FRCS (Tr & orth)
Renu Gupta FRCR
spellingShingle John Williams MRCS
Felix Allen MBBS
Marta Kedrzycki MRCS
Yathish Shenava FRCS (Tr & orth)
Renu Gupta FRCR
Use of Multislice CT for Investigation of Occult Geriatric Hip Fractures and Impact on Timing of Surgery
Geriatric Orthopaedic Surgery & Rehabilitation
author_facet John Williams MRCS
Felix Allen MBBS
Marta Kedrzycki MRCS
Yathish Shenava FRCS (Tr & orth)
Renu Gupta FRCR
author_sort John Williams MRCS
title Use of Multislice CT for Investigation of Occult Geriatric Hip Fractures and Impact on Timing of Surgery
title_short Use of Multislice CT for Investigation of Occult Geriatric Hip Fractures and Impact on Timing of Surgery
title_full Use of Multislice CT for Investigation of Occult Geriatric Hip Fractures and Impact on Timing of Surgery
title_fullStr Use of Multislice CT for Investigation of Occult Geriatric Hip Fractures and Impact on Timing of Surgery
title_full_unstemmed Use of Multislice CT for Investigation of Occult Geriatric Hip Fractures and Impact on Timing of Surgery
title_sort use of multislice ct for investigation of occult geriatric hip fractures and impact on timing of surgery
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Geriatric Orthopaedic Surgery & Rehabilitation
issn 2151-4593
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Introduction: The National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence guidelines in the United Kingdom recommend magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as the first-line investigation for radiographically occult hip fractures, if available within 24 hours. In our department, however, multislice computerized tomography (MSCT) is instead used as a first-line investigation due to significant delays associated with obtaining MRI. Our aim was to determine the validity and practicality of MSCT for diagnosis of occult hip fractures and its impact on timing of surgery. Materials and Methods: We retrospectively analyzed medical records and imaging for consecutive patients who underwent MSCT to investigate occult hip fractures between January 2014 and October 2016. We reviewed subsequent imaging and reattendances for patients with negative MSCT to exclude initially missed fractures. Results: Two hundred six patients underwent MSCT to investigate occult hip fracture during the study period. Hip fractures were identified in 59 patients, comprising 35 (59.3%) subcapital, 12 (20.0%) intertrochanteric, 8 (13.6%) transcervical, and 4 (6.8%) basicervical fractures. One missed hip fracture was identified: a patient with a negative MSCT was further investigated with MRI that demonstrated acute subcapital hip fracture. Multislice computerized tomography was obtained within 24 hours of initial radiograph in 145 (70.4%) patients. A total of 44.5% of occult hip fractures had surgery within the nationally recommended 36 hours of admission (hospital average for all hip fractures was 76.4% over the same period). Discussion and Conclusions: Multislice computerized tomography is a pragmatic approach to investigate the majority of occult hip fractures in a timely manner and minimize associated delay to surgery. However it cannot completely exclude the diagnosis, especially in abnormal anatomy. The lack of a true gold standard comparison (ie, MRI) means a true sensitivity and specificity cannot be calculated, although can be cautiously estimated by lack of subsequent reattendance or investigation. Further prospective randomized CT versus MRI trials are required.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2151459318821214
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