[Day-case outpatient endoprosthetics-"Ultra-Fast-Track"]
Fast-track procedures are common in general surgery today. In our European neighbour countries and in the USA, one-day-surgery for knee and hip replacement is gaining popularity. However, it is of great importance that a detailed concept for prehabilitation with a sufficient training program and targeted instructions regarding behavioral measures are established to allow a safe outpatient procedure. Where fast-track programs are established, one-day surgery with minimally invasive operative procedures for hip and knee arthroplasty is the consequent next step.
[Outpatient care through cross-sector prehabilitation and rehabilitation concepts in outpatient hip and knee arthroplasty]
No appeal by a health politician, no matter how insistent, has ever forced all the operational structures of our health-care system to examine their own efficiencies and cost reduction potentials as has SARS-CoV‑2. Fast-track surgery, developed long before the current pandemic, can become an indispensable element of modern hospital routines through the integration of interlocked care structures. Patient satisfaction and clinical outcome can be improved by significantly shortening hospital stays, decreasing complication rates, and by additionally strengthening the competence and motivation of the patients involved. Hospital staff could be relieved of heavy workloads, and overall costs could be reduced by involving external prehabilitation centers. It is now necessary to further develop standards for the establishment and implementation of appropriately coordinated prehabilitation and rehabilitation concepts for elective total hip and knee replacement surgery and, ideally, to save resources at the same time through regional networking and integration.
[Epiphysiodesis and hemiepiphysiodesis : Physeal arrest and guided growth for the lower extremity]
The principals of growth arrest by epiphysiodesis and growth guidance by hemiepiphysiodesis are effective and powerful surgical techniques in pediatric orthopedics. These procedures can be used to correct leg length discrepancies as well as sagittal, coronal and oblique deformities. A differentiation is made between temporary and permanent techniques. The most significant advantage is that these techniques are minimally invasive and have low complication rates compared to acute osteotomy and gradual deformity correction. For optimal outcome an exact preoperative planning is needed to ensure accurate timing of the procedure, especially when permanent epiphysiodesis techniques are used. Although epiphysiodesis and hemiepiphysiodesis around the pediatric knee are most frequently used and can be considered the gold standard treatment of coronal plane deformities and leg length discrepancies, novel techniques for the hip and ankle are increasingly being performed. The successful clinical results with low complications support the broad use of hemiepiphysiodesis and epiphysiodesis for a variety of indications in the growing skeleton with deformities and leg length differences.
[Discharge readiness versus discharge-Results of the PROMISE study]
In the context of optimized treatment processes for knee and hip replacements, lengths of stay are given for Germany that clearly exceed the internationally published ones. In this context, the present analysis of data from the PROMISE study deals with the relationship between discharge readiness and discharge.
[Results and lessons learned in fast-track arthroplasty]
Fast-track concepts in arthroplasty are understood as programs to optimize and homogenize perioperative procedures. With few exceptions, the literature reports a reduction in hospitalization time, a decrease in mortality and complications, earlier mobilization, and increased patient satisfaction through fast-track programs.
[Pain therapy and anaesthesiological procedures in fast-track arthroplasty]
Since the introduction of fast-track surgery in the field of arthroplasty, all disciplines involved have been challenged with the task of close and continuous joint communication in the context of daily routine care. Processes that have been agreed upon interdisciplinarily must be reviewed at regular intervals, and, if necessary, adapted and newly agreed upon with the aim of optimizing the perioperative risks both medically and along the therapeutic pathway. The responsibility of the anaesthesiologist is not only limited to the performance of anaesthesia, but also includes the care of patients with a view to optimal pain therapy, maintenance of homeostasis and ensuring a rapid return of the patient's self-determination.
[Perioperative management in fast-track arthroplasty]
The optimization of organizational processes, as well as surgical procedures intra- and perioperatively, are essential components with respect to fast-track programs in clinical routine. Treatment concepts focus on early postoperative mobilization of patients after joint replacement surgery in an interdisciplinary setting to avoid pain and complications on a scientific basis. This article gives a comprehensive and detailed overview regarding evidence-based peri- and intraoperative fast-track treatment methods: from pain treatment with intraoperative local infiltration analgesia and tranexamic acid application under minimally invasive surgical approach in short-lasting spinal anesthesia to renunciation of drains, regional pain- and urinary catheters, tourniquets, and restrictions.
[Preoperative management in fast-track arthroplasty]
Preoperative management of patients following fast-track arthroplasty protocols includes comprehensive patient information and risk stratification.
[Scheuermann's disease]
Scheuermann's disease represents the second most common deformity of the growing spine after the various forms of scoliosis. In cases of early diagnosis and mild kyphotic deformity conservative treatment with a brace and physiotherapy shows very good results; however, in cases of neurologic deficits, curve progression despite conservative treatment and increasing pain symptoms with a Stagnara angle of more than 70-75°, surgical treatment is meaningful. The surgical strategy can include posterior spondylodesis with prior anterior release or posterior instrumentation with posterior column osteotomy depending on the surgeon's experience. The choice of the extent of the operation with the vertebrae to be instrumented and including the straightening method should be oriented to the avoidance of complications, such as proximal or distal junctional kyphosis.
[A functional approach to disorders of the loco-motor system-a way to a better understanding?]
Disorders of the loco-motor system are frequent and expensive. The current method of diagnosing and treating these disorders does not appear to be successful.
[Somatic dysfunction of the cervical spine and its complex clinical picture : The fundamentals of diagnostics of cervicobrachialgia and cervicocephalic syndrome through manual medicine]
Patients suffering from a segmental and somatic dysfunction of the cervical spine often present a wide variety of clinical symptoms related to cervicobrachial or cervicocephalic syndrome. These symptoms might evolve out of complex neural intersegmental or trigeminocervical interactions in the brain stem or the spinal cord of the cervical spine. After the exclusion of life-threatening preconditions, a careful physical examination with aspects of manual medicine aspects might unmask the cervical dysfunction as the primary cause of the symptoms. Treatment with manual medicine on the basis of a segmental antinociceptive proprioceptive input might then be an appropriate therapeutic approach.
[Spinal manipulation therapy in low back pain : Why? When? Where? How?]
Manipulation and mobilisation for low back pain are presented in an evidence-based manner with regard to mechanisms of action, indications, efficacy, cost-effectiveness ratio, user criteria and adverse effects. Terms such as non-specific or specific are replaced by the introduction of "entities" related to possible different low back pain forms.
[Therapeutic injections and manual medicine in low-back pain : Bimodal synergies between evidence and empiricism]
Oriented towards the therapy planning and management of rheumatic patients, and based on the differentiated therapeutic principles of manual medicine (MM) with knowledge on evidence of therapeutic local infiltration techniques (TLI), the author pleads for the establishment of a structured, mechanism-based therapy concept in the sense of "treat to target" (T2T) for patients with (chronic) degenerative low-back pain (LBP) in outpatient pain therapy care.
[Segmental and somatic dysfunction : How does manual medicine work?]
Manual medicine is based on neurophysiologic and biomechanical principles. Impaired senso-motor regulation causes segmental and somatic dysfunction. Via segmental mapping, somato-sensory and vegetative dysfunction arises. Local pain, referred pain, and vague symptoms can occur in the thoracic and abdominal regions. Myofascial structures can transfer these dysfunctions to other body areas, where segmental neuronal connections lead to further dysfunction. Manual medicine addresses these aspects.
[Manual medicine for the extremity joints : Successful treatment of complex symptom constellations]
One important field of manual medicine is the special diagnosis and treatment of the extremities. Biomechanical and neurophysiologic knowledge allows identification and treatment of so-called kinetic chain syndromes. The manual diagnosis of the extremities follows clear criteria and enables the diagnosis of myofascial or joint dysfunction. The manual approach to the extremities has many parallels with spinal treatment, although in certain cases, it follows a distinct algorithm. This article addresses the manual diagnosis and treatment of the joints of the extremities. Three case reports demonstrate how symptoms and manual findings guide manipulative treatment and what impact this can have.
[Standard administration of tranexamic acid for prophylaxis in endoprosthetics: a good idea?]
[From acute coronary syndrome to zoster : Differential diagnostics in segmental and somatic dysfunction of the thoracic spine and ribs]
Segmental and somatic dysfunction in the thoracic section can lead to various clinical symptoms. It is necessary to distinguish three variants.
