Modern Management of Severe Open Fractures of the Extremities: The Role of the Induced Membrane Technique
- PMID: 39908357
- DOI: 10.2106/JBJS.24.00647
Modern Management of Severe Open Fractures of the Extremities: The Role of the Induced Membrane Technique
Abstract
➢ The administration of antibiotics, revascularization, effective initial debridement, stabilization, and dead-space management are important time-dependent, acute actions.➢ Following the adequate resuscitation of the patient and the local soft tissues, the first stage of the Masquelet technique is performed together with the definitive coverage of the soft-tissue defect.➢ The optimal time for the second stage (grafting of the bone defect) depends on the progress of the soft-tissue reconstruction and the overall state of the patient. It is usually at 6 to 14 weeks.➢ Bone graft involves cancellous autograft; depending on the volume of the defect, it can be acquired using different donor sites and methods and can be combined with cancellous allograft, bone substitutes, bone marrow aspirate, and inductive molecules.➢ Bone healing is independent of the size of the defect, assuming that revascularization of the graft material has not been disturbed.➢ The development of signs of a fracture-related infection in the clinical setting of a severe open fracture dictates surgical treatment and pathogen-specific antibiotics, debridement of the membrane and the surrounding soft tissues, and reinitiation of the staged process of limb salvage.➢ The results of staged management of severe open fractures with bone defects are reproducible and good.
Copyright © 2025 The Authors. Published by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated.
Conflict of interest statement
Disclosure: No external funding was received for this work. The Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest forms are provided with the online version of the article ( http://links.lww.com/JBJS/I374 ).
References
-
- Costa ML, Achten J, Bruce J, Tutton E, Petrou S, Lamb SE, Parsons NR; UK WOLLF Collaboration. Effect of negative pressure wound therapy vs standard wound management on 12-month disability among adults with severe open fracture of the lower limb: the WOLLF randomized clinical trial. JAMA. 2018 Jun 12;319(22):2280-8.
-
- Shah A, Judge A, Griffin XL. Incidence and quality of care for open fractures in England between 2008 and 2019: a cohort study using data collected by the Trauma Audit and Research Network. Bone Joint J. 2022 Jun;104-B(6):736-46.
-
- Court-Brown CM, Bugler KE, Clement ND, Duckworth AD, McQueen MM. The epidemiology of open fractures in adults. A 15-year review. Injury. 2012 Jun;43(6):891-7.
-
- Gustilo RB, Mendoza RM, Williams DN. Problems in the management of type III (severe) open fractures: a new classification of type III open fractures. J Trauma. 1984 Aug;24(8):742-6.
-
- Rajasekaran S, Naresh Babu J, Dheenadhayalan J, Shetty AP, Sundararajan SR, Kumar M, Rajasabapathy S. A score for predicting salvage and outcome in Gustilo type-IIIA and type-IIIB open tibial fractures. J Bone Joint Surg Br. 2006 Oct;88(10):1351-60.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical