Cardiopulmonary collapse in frail patients treated with cemented and uncemented hemiarthroplasty
Thomas P. Bosch, Max P. L. van der Sijp, Pieta Krijnen, Arthur H. P. Niggebrugge, Rachid Mahdad, Inger B. Schipper

TL;DR
Frail patients undergoing cemented hip surgery face a higher risk of life-threatening cardiopulmonary issues compared to those with uncemented surgery.
Contribution
This study identifies cemented hemiarthroplasty and reduced heart function as significant risk factors for cardiopulmonary collapse in frail, high-risk patients.
Findings
Cemented hemiarthroplasty triples the risk of cardiopulmonary collapse compared to uncemented procedures.
Reduced left ventricle ejection fraction is an independent risk factor for cardiopulmonary collapse.
Cemented surgery is associated with a 51.1% incidence of cardiopulmonary collapse in frail patients.
Abstract
Peri-operative cardiopulmonary collapse (CPC) poses an increased risk of in-hospital mortality, especially in frail patients. Bone Cement Implantation Syndrome (BCIS) is CPC following, cemented, arthroplasty, characterized by hypoxia and/or hypotension. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the association between cemented hemiarthroplasty and CPC, in patients with a femoral neck fracture (FNF) and increased pre-operative risk, and identify other risk factors for cardiopulmonary collapse. This retrospective cohort study included patients with a FNF treated with a cemented or uncemented hemiarthroplasty, aged ≥ 80 years, with ASA score ≥ 3 and ≥ 1 cardiac or pulmonal comorbidity. CPC was defined as hypoxia/hypotension grade ≥ 2 according to Donaldson’s criteria. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to adjust for confounding in the relation between cemented…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHip and Femur Fractures · Cardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes · Aortic Disease and Treatment Approaches
