Abstract

This paper assesses the outcomes of patients after surgery for a proximal femur fracture while on clopidogrel. It describes a single-centre retrospective observational study over a two-year period. A total of 31 surgical patients were included in this study. Of these, 28 were on clopidogrel and 3 on dipyridamole. Patients were split into subgroups based on when surgery took place and the type of hip fracture. The 'early surgery' (<48 hours from admission to theatre) group contained 16 patients (51.6%) and the 'late surgery' (>48 hours) group composed 15 patients (48.4%). Type of surgery performed and pre-and postoperative haemoglobin (Hb) levels were recorded. Furthermore, the number of units of blood transfused per patient as well as complications before and after surgery were noted. A significantly larger mean hb drop occurred in the early surgery group (3.2g/dl) compared with the late surgery group (2.3g/dl) (p=0.027). The mean length of inpatient stay was 21 days in the early and 23 days in the late group (p=0.456). A significantly larger hb mean drop occurred in patients with extracapsular hip fractures (3.4g/dl; n=16) compared with patients with intracapsular fractures (2.3g/dl; n=15) (p=0.020). The extracapsular patients had longer stays in hospital: 24.5 days versus 19.8 days in the intracapsular group (p=0.521). There was no statistical difference in the 30-day mortality between the early surgery (3/16 deaths) and late surgery (2/15 deaths) groups (p=0.481). Patients with extracapsular fractures, treated with early surgery, appear to be most at risk of complications after surgery.

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