Affiliation:
1. Department of Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, St George's Hospital London, UK
Abstract
INTRODUCTIONWe performed an audit to assess frequency of injury to the nail bed and outcomes after repair in a busy paedi-atric hand trauma clinic.SUBJECTS AND METHODSThis retrospective study examines 46 consecutive nail bed repairs over a 6-month period. All notes were reviewed for patient demographics, details of the injury including the operation and aftercare. Telephone interviews were used to assess patient/parent satisfaction and complications.RESULTSThe commonest mechanism of injury was trapping a finger in a door. The accident usually occurred indoors and most frequently affected the middle finger. The majority of repairs were carried out under general anaesthetic, by registrars, using absorbable synthetic sutures, within 24 h of the injury as a day-case. Outcome data with a minimum of 15 months follow-up, showed a high satisfaction rate (8.9/10) and low complication rate (7%), none of which required further surgery. There was a high failure rate of attendance in the follow-up clinic whilst the outcomes of those attending were good.CONCLUSIONSOutcomes and patient satisfaction were good with a low complication rate resulting in a change of practice in our unit to an ‘opt-in’ system for follow-up.
Publisher
Royal College of Surgeons of England
Cited by
12 articles.
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