Orthopaedics and COVID-19: The surgery, the surgeon and the susceptible - a scoping review

Megan P. O’Connor, L. Nieuwoudt, L. Marais
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background: The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is taxing South Africa’s already over-burdened healthcare system. Orthopaedics is not exempt; patients present with COVID-19 and musculoskeletal pathology and so surgeons should be familiar with the current evidence to best manage patients and themselves. The aims of this scoping review were firstly to inform peri-operative decision-making for COVID-positive patients as well as the routine orthopaedic milieu during the pandemic; secondly to assess the outcomes of orthopaedic patients managed in endemic areas; and finally to determine the effect the pandemic has had on our orthopaedic peers. Methods: A scoping review was conducted following the PRISMA-ScR guidelines of 2018. The search terms ‘Orthopaedics’ or ‘Orthopedics’ and ‘COVID-19’ or ‘Coronavirus’ were used to perform the search on Scopus, PubMed and Cochrane databases. All peer-reviewed articles utilising evidence-based methodology and addressing one of the objectives were eligible. A thematic approach was used for qualitative data synthesis. Results: Seventeen articles were identified for inclusion. All articles represented level 4 and 5 evidence and comprised ten review-type articles, one consensus statement, two web-based surveys and four observational studies. Most articles (n=11) addressed the objective of peri-operative considerations covering the stratification and testing of patients, theatre precautions and personal protective equipment (PPE). Evidence suggests that patients should be stratified for surgery according to the urgency of their procedure, their risk of asymptomatic disease (related to the community prevalence of COVID-19) and their comorbidities. The consensus is that all patients should be screened (asked a set of standardised questions with regard their symptoms and contacts). Only symptomatic patients and those asymptomatic patients from high prevalence areas or those with high-risk contacts should be tested. Healthcare workers (HCWs) in theatre should maintain safety precautions considering every individual is a potential contact. In the operating room in addition to the standard orthopaedic surgery PPE, if a patient is COVID positive, surgeons should don an N95 respirator. The three articles that addressed the effects on the orthopaedic surgeon showed a significant redeployment rate, effects on monetary renumeration of specialists and also effects on surgeons in training causing negative emotional ramifications. Of the surgeons who have contracted the illness and have been investigated, all showed mild symptomatology and recovered fully. The final three articles concentrated on orthopaedic patient considerations; they all showed high mortality rates in the vulnerable patient populations investigated, but had significant limitations. Conclusion: Orthopaedics is significantly affected by the COVID pandemic but there remains a dearth of high-quality evidence to guide the specialty. Level of evidence: Level 3
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骨科与COVID-19:手术、外科医生和易感者-范围综述
背景:2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行使南非本已负担过重的医疗保健系统雪上加霜。整形外科也不例外;患有COVID-19和肌肉骨骼病理学的患者,因此外科医生应该熟悉目前的证据,以便最好地管理患者和自己。本次范围审查的目的首先是为covid - ray阳性患者的围手术期决策以及大流行期间的常规骨科环境提供信息;第二,评估流行地区骨科患者管理的效果;最后确定大流行对我们骨科同行的影响。方法:根据2018年PRISMA-ScR指南进行范围审查。在Scopus、PubMed和Cochrane数据库中使用搜索词“Orthopaedics”或“Orthopedics”和“COVID-19”或“Coronavirus”进行搜索。所有采用循证方法并解决其中一个目标的同行评议文章均符合条件。定性数据综合采用了专题方法。结果:17篇文章被纳入。所有文章均为4级和5级证据,包括10篇综述型文章、1篇共识声明、2篇基于网络的调查和4项观察性研究。大多数文章(n=11)讨论了围手术期注意事项,包括患者分层和检测、手术室预防措施和个人防护装备(PPE)。有证据表明,应根据手术的紧急程度、无症状疾病的风险(与社区COVID-19流行有关)及其合并症对患者进行分层手术。达成的共识是,所有患者都应接受筛查(询问一组关于其症状和接触者的标准化问题)。只对有症状的患者和来自高流行地区的无症状患者或高危接触者进行检测。考虑到每个人都是潜在的接触者,手术室的卫生保健工作者(HCWs)应保持安全预防措施。在手术室中,除了标准的骨科手术PPE外,如果患者呈COVID阳性,外科医生应佩戴N95呼吸器。这三篇文章讨论了对整形外科医生的影响,显示了显著的重新部署率,对专家的货币报酬的影响,以及对正在接受培训的外科医生造成负面情绪影响的影响。在感染该病并接受调查的外科医生中,均表现出轻微的症状并完全康复。最后三篇文章集中在骨科患者的注意事项;它们都显示在调查的脆弱患者群体中死亡率很高,但有显著的局限性。结论:新冠肺炎疫情对骨科的影响较大,但仍缺乏高质量的证据来指导骨科的发展。证据等级:三级
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来源期刊
SA Orthopaedic Journal
SA Orthopaedic Journal Medicine-Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
6 weeks
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