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Review
. 2020 Sep;15(5):686-691.
doi: 10.1177/1558944718810882. Epub 2018 Nov 22.

Smoking Increases Postoperative Complications After Distal Radius Fracture Fixation: A Review of 417 Patients From a Level 1 Trauma Center

Affiliations
Review

Smoking Increases Postoperative Complications After Distal Radius Fracture Fixation: A Review of 417 Patients From a Level 1 Trauma Center

Daniel E Hess et al. Hand (N Y). 2020 Sep.

Abstract

Background: Unstable distal radius fractures that undergo surgical stabilization have varying complication rates in the literature. Smoking is known to affect bone healing and implant fixation rates but has never been definitively shown to affect postoperative outcomes of surgically managed distal radius fractures. Methods: A retrospective review was performed of patients with surgically treated distal radius fractures at a Level 1 Trauma Center who had at least 6 weeks of follow-up over a 5-year period. Charts were reviewed for basic demographic information, comorbidities, details about the operative procedure, and early complications. Notable physical examination findings were noted, such as wrist stiffness and distal radius tenderness to palpation. Statistical analysis was performed to compare the smoking and nonsmoking groups. To control for confounding differences, a hierarchical multivariable regression analysis was performed. Results: Four hundred seventeen patients were included in the study, and 24.6% were current smokers at the time of surgery. The overall complication rate for smokers was 9.8% compared with 5.6% in nonsmokers. The smoking cohort showed significantly higher rates of hardware removal, nonunion, revision procedures, wrist stiffness, and distal radius tenderness. When controlling for the confounding variables of diabetes and obesity, smokers still had significantly higher rates of the same complications. Conclusion: Patients who smoke have a statistically significant higher rate of postoperative distal radius tenderness, wrist stiffness, nonunion, hardware removal, and revision procedures compared with those who do not smoke in a review of 417 total patients undergoing surgical fixation for distal radius fractures.

Keywords: bone healing; distal radius; postoperative complications; smoking; surgical fixation.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Statistically significant complications by smoking status. The graph highlights the complication measures that were statistically significant in our smoking group when compared with the nonsmoking group.

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