6 results on '"Clare E, Griffis"'
Search Results
2. Proportion of Navy Recruits Diagnosed With Symptomatic Stress Fractures During Training and Monetary Impact of These Injuries
- Author
-
Clare E, Griffis, Aileen M, Pletta, Christian, Mutschler, Anwar E, Ahmed, and Shannon D, Lorimer
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Fractures, Stress ,General Medicine ,Medicare ,Vitamin D Deficiency ,United States ,Young Adult ,Military Personnel ,Humans ,Female ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,Vitamin D ,Aged ,Leg Injuries ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Lower extremity stress fractures result in lost time from work and sport and incur costs in the military when they occur in service members. Hypovitaminosis D has been identified as key risk factor in these injuries. An estimated 33% to 90% of collegiate and professional athletes have deficient vitamin D levels. Other branches of the United States military have evaluated the risk factors for stress fractures during basic training, including vitamin D deficiency. To the best of our knowledge, a study evaluating the correlation between these injuries and vitamin D deficiency in US Navy recruits and a cost analysis of these injuries has not been performed. Cutbacks in military medical staffing mean more active-duty personnel are being deferred for care to civilian providers. Consequently, data that previously were only pertinent to military medical providers have now expanded to the nonmilitary medical community.We therefore asked: (1) What proportion of US Navy recruits experience symptomatic lower extremity stress fractures, and what proportion of those recruits had hypovitaminosis vitamin D on laboratory testing? (2) What are the rehabilitation costs involved in the treatment of lower extremity stress fractures, including the associated costs of lost training time? (3) Is there a cost difference in the treatment of stress fractures between recruits with lower extremity stress fractures who have vitamin D deficiency and those without vitamin D deficiency?We retrospectively evaluated the electronic medical record at Naval Recruit Training Command in Great Lakes, IL, USA, of all active-duty males and females trained from 2009 until 2015. We used ICD-9 and ICD-10 diagnosis codes to identify those diagnosed with symptomatic lower extremity stress fractures. Data collected included geographic region of birth, preexisting vitamin D deficiency, vitamin D level at the time of diagnosis, medical history, BMI, age, sex, self-reported race or ethnicity, hospitalization days, days lost from training, and the number of physical therapy, primary care, and specialty visits. To ascertain the proportion of recruits who developed symptomatic stress fractures, we divided the number of recruits who were diagnosed with a stress fracture by the total number who trained over that span of time, which was 204,774 individuals. During the span of this study, 45% (494 of 1098) of recruits diagnosed with a symptomatic stress fracture were female and 55% (604 of 1098) were male, with a mean ± SD age of 24 ± 4 years. We defined hypovitaminosis D as a vitamin D level lower than 40 ng/mL. Levels less than 40 ng/mL were defined as low normal and levels less than 30 ng/mL as deficient. Vitamin D levels were obtained at the discretion of the individual treating provider without standardization of protocol. Cost was defined as physical therapy visits, primary care visits, orthopaedic visits, diagnostic imaging costs, laboratory costs, hospitalizations, if applicable, and days lost from training. Diagnostic studies and laboratory tests were incorporated as indirect costs into initial and follow-up physical therapy visits. Evaluation and management code fee schedules for initial visits and follow-up visits were used as direct costs. We obtained these data from the Centers for MedicareMedicaid Services website. Per capita cost was calculated by taking the total cost and dividing it by the study population. Days lost from training is based on a standardized government military salary of recruits to include room and board.We found that 0.5% (1098 of 204,774) of recruits developed a symptomatic lower extremity stress fracture. Of the recruits who had vitamin D levels drawn at the time of stress fracture, 95% (416 of 437 [95% confidence interval (CI) 94% to 98%]; p0.99) had hypovitaminosis D (≤ 40 ng/mL) and 82% (360 of 437 [95% CI 79% to 86%]; p0.99) had deficient levels (≤ 30 ng/mL) on laboratory testing, when evaluated. The total treatment cost was USD 9506 per recruit. Days lost in training was a median of 56 days (4 to 108) for a per capita cost of USD 5447 per recruit. Recruits with deficient vitamin D levels (levels ≤ 30 ng/mL) incurred more physical therapy treatment costs than did those with low-normal vitamin D levels (levels 31 to 40 ng/mL) (mean difference USD 965 [95% CI 2 to 1928]; p = 0.049).The cost of lost training and rehabilitation associated with symptomatic lower extremity stress fractures represents a major financial burden. Screening for and treatment of vitamin D deficiencies before recruit training could offer a cost-effective solution to decreasing the stress fracture risk. Recognition and treatment of these deficiencies has a role beyond the military, as hypovitaminosis and stress fractures are common in collegiate or professional athletes.Level III, prognostic study.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Oblique lateral interbody fusion: The fundamentals for practice
- Author
-
Clare E. Griffis and Christopher P. Carroll
- Subjects
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Return to Duty in Military Members Following Surgical Treatment of Incomplete Femoral Neck Fractures
- Author
-
Clare E, Griffis, Vanna, Rocchi, Grant, Cochran, and Kevin M, Kuhn
- Subjects
Military Personnel ,Return to Work ,Risk Factors ,Disease Progression ,Humans ,Femoral Neck Fractures ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine whether active duty military members treated surgically for incomplete femoral neck stress fractures (FNSFs) return to duty. A retrospective review of 53 patients was evaluated to determine the rate of return to duty (RTD) related to sex, branch of service, side of fracture, and signs of femoroacetabular impingement (FAI). Signs of FAI were measured and compared to RTD. Sixty-seven percent of the sample population did not return to duty. Eighty-three percent of Marine Corps members did not return to duty and 18% of Navy active duty members did not return to duty. This finding was statistically significant (
- Published
- 2019
5. Validity of computed tomography in predicting scaphoid screw prominence: a cadaveric study
- Author
-
Leon J. Nesti, Patricia L. McKay, Michael Frew, C Frank Gould, Clare E Griffis, and Cara H. Olsen
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,Models, Anatomic ,Wrist Joint ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Radiography ,Bone Screws ,03 medical and health sciences ,Metal Artifact ,Fracture Fixation, Internal ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fracture fixation ,medicine ,Cadaver ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Scaphoid Bone ,030222 orthopedics ,Artifact (error) ,business.industry ,030229 sport sciences ,General Medicine ,Sagittal plane ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Metals ,Orthopedic surgery ,Calipers ,Surgery ,Cadaveric spasm ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Artifacts ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Studies of hardware protrusion into joint spaces following fracture fixation have been performed to address whether or not there is discrepancy between the actual and radiographic appearance of screw prominence. The purpose of our study was to prove that, with respect to the scaphoid, prominence as visualized on CT scan is real and not a result of metal artifact. Forty-two cadaveric wrists were separated into four allotted groups with 21 control specimens and 21 study specimens. All specimens were radiographically screened to exclude those with inherent carpal abnormalities. Acutrak® headless compression screws were placed into all specimens using an open dorsal approach. Cartilage was removed from screw insertion site at the convex surface of the scaphoid proximal pole. Control specimens had 0 mm screw head prominence. The studied specimens had 1, 2, and 3 mm head prominence measured with a digital caliper. Computed tomography, with direct sagittal acquisition and metal suppression technique, was then performed on all specimens following screw placement. Two staff radiologists blinded to the study groups interpreted the images. Results revealed that only one of 21 control specimens was interpreted as prominent. Comparatively, in the studied groups, 90% were accurately interpreted as prominent. CT provides an accurate assessment of scaphoid screw head prominence. When a screw appears prominent on CT scan, it is likely to be truly prominent without contribution from metallic artifact.
- Published
- 2016
6. Recognition of Small Bowel Entrapment in the Pubic Symphysis Following Combat-Related Traumatic Pelvic Fracture
- Author
-
Ens Clare E. Griffis, Cdr Mark E. Fleming, Cdr Joseph Strauss, Ens Gregory Hall, and Col Romney C. Andersen
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Exploratory laparotomy ,Pubic Symphysis Diastasis ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pubic symphysis ,medicine.disease ,Blast injury ,Surgery ,External fixation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Laparotomy ,medicine ,Pelvic fracture ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,business ,Reduction (orthopedic surgery) - Abstract
To the best of our knowledge, this report is the first documented case of small bowel entrapment in the pubic symphysis following closed reduction of an APC-III pelvic fracture as a result of a high-energy blast during combat. Our patient is a marine in the United States Marine Corps who had been on a dismounted foot patrol in Afghanistan when he had sustained a substantial blast injury. He had received multiple lifesaving measures downrange, including an exploratory laparotomy with a diverting sigmoid colostomy, pelvic packing, and pelvic external fixation with unsuccessful attempts at closed reduction. A revision of the pelvic external fixation was performed at the final echelon of care with the successful closed reduction of a 4 to 5-cm pubic symphysis diastasis. Repeat exploration of the laparotomy revealed incarcerated small bowel within the pubic symphysis, which required small bowel resection and anastomosis. Fortunately, this case had a favorable outcome with no deficit in small bowel function. Stubbart and Merkley1 have reviewed nineteen cases of various entrapments within the pelvic ring following traumatic injuries, but none have documented small bowel entrapment in the pubic symphysis. Our case describes this rare complication and discusses the implications that associated disruption of the anterior peritoneal wall has on the risk of entrapping small bowel within the pubic symphysis during closed reduction of pelvic fracture. Orthopaedic trauma surgeons should consider direct visualization of the fracture reduction when the integrity of peritoneal injury repair is unknown. The patient was informed that data concerning his case would be submitted for publication, and he provided consent. A twenty-one-year-old active-duty marine in the United States Marine Corps had sustained a devastating blast injury while on foot patrol in support of Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. Arriving at the Forward Operating Base aid station, the patient’s systolic blood …
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.