Association Between Cemented vs Cementless Hemiarthroplasty and Short-Term Change of In-Hospital Mortality in Elderly Patients with Femoral Neck Fracture: A Propensity-Score Matching Analysis in a Multicenter Database.
Takahisa OgawaToshitaka YoshiiAtsushi OkawaKiyohide FushimiTetsuya JinnoPublished in: Clinical interventions in aging (2021)
Cemented hemiarthroplasty was not significantly associated with an increase in overall in-hospital mortality but was significantly associated with short-term mortality from 1-day to 10-day after surgery. The incidence of stroke and ICU admission was also significantly higher in the cemented group. Surgeons should pay more attention to the risk of mortality and stroke in patients undergoing cemented hemiarthroplasty, especially in the early days of hospitalization.
Keyphrases
- total knee arthroplasty
- total hip
- hip fracture
- total hip arthroplasty
- patients undergoing
- atrial fibrillation
- risk factors
- cardiovascular events
- intensive care unit
- emergency department
- working memory
- quality improvement
- middle aged
- coronary artery disease
- cardiovascular disease
- clinical trial
- thoracic surgery
- blood brain barrier
- brain injury