View clinical trials related to Fractures, Open.
Filter by:The goal of this observational study is to examine and confirm the clinical performance of the Fitbone Transport and Lengthening System in adult patients (21 years and older) who require lower-limb lengthening, fracture fixation and/or treatment for previous non-healing fracture. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Are their any unanticipated safety issues with the product when used in a real-world setting? 2. Does the product provide the anticipated clinical benefit when used in a real-world setting? Participants will have been selected by their physician to be treated with the Fitbone Transport and Lengthening System as part of treatment for their condition or injury. All procedures will be according to the physician's standard care practices. There are no study-specific procedures or requirements for participants in this study.
The aim of this study is to study the incidence of open tibial fractures in early teenagers and evaluate the management outcomes
The aim of this study is to assess interobserver reliability, sensitivity for amputation, and specificity for salvage of GHS in type-III injuries with open tibial fractures and predict the potential number of inpatient days, secondary procedures that would be required, and the rate of infection
Road traffic accidents (RTA) is the most common cause of open fractures of long bones, increase in RTA leading to increase of complex non-unions incidence. the Participants are usually undergoing multiple surgeries for healing or to eradicate infection, which in turn leading to loss of bone and soft tissues and require skin grafting, muscle pedicle graft or bone grafting. Sometimes the Participants end up with deformity, limb length discrepancy, joints stiffness, disuse osteoporosis and muscle atrophy after management
The proposed research aims to be a pilot feasibility study to evaluate intraoperative fluorescence angiography (IFA) as an aid for acute debridement in orthopaedic trauma.
This study is a prospective, randomized, controlled, double-arm, non-inferiority study that will be carried out in China. It aims to compare two implant systems (the research group uses surface-modified composite coated orthopedic implants, and controls group using conventional orthopedic implants) safety and effectiveness. A total of 240 patients were recruited. The recruited patients are randomly divided into groups at a ratio of 1:1 to ensure that the distribution of patients in the treatment group and the control group is consistent. Patients will receive clinical follow-up in the 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months postoperatively. The main indicator for evaluation is the postoperative infection rate, and the secondary indicators include the SF-12 scoring scale, EQ-5D patient questionnaire score, fracture healing, malunion, nonunion incidence in the 12th month after surgery, and skin and soft tissue complications Symptom incidence rate. The follow-up data will be used to determine the main safety and effectiveness of the new surface modified composite coated orthopedic implant system.
- Evaluate the role of VAC in decreasing the time needed for soft tissue coverage and definitive fixation in open IIIB tibial fractures
A randomized controlled trial is performed to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of the Skin Stretching Device (SSD) on limb tension incision closure by comparing whether the differences in wounds area, wounds closure time and scar assessment between the SSD and the skin grafting are statistically significant.
Determine if antibiotic prophylaxis with intravenous cephalosporin and aminoglycoside in patients with Type II and II open fractures is safe and effective.
Prospective look at antibiotic prophylaxis with Ceftaroline in patients with type II and III open fractures