Abstract

BackgroundThe national database of health insurance claims of Japan (NDB) includes almost all health insurance claims in Japan. Currently, we have many cases of geriatric fracture in Japan, probably due to an increase of the elderly population. The increase of geriatric fractures may influence the use of low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS), which is used to accelerate the fracture repair process. The present state of LIPUS treatments was analyzed using the large dataset of the NDB. MethodsThe open data from the NDB that were used included receipts from April 2015 to March 2016. The total numbers of fracture treatments were counted as the sum of the claim items that were involved in fracture treatments. Two types of the insurance claim items for LIPUS treatments were counted separately: those used for delayed or non-union fractures; and those used for fractures within two weeks after osteosynthesis. Additionally, the ratio of the LIPUS treatments per the fracture treatments was calculated. ResultsIn female patients, the number of LIPUS treatments for fractures early after osteosynthesis showed a large peak in the senile generation. Additionally, the ratio of LIPUS treatments early after osteosynthesis to all osteosynthesis treatments tended to increase with age in both males and females, while the ratio of the LIPUS treatments for delayed or non-union fractures to all fracture treatments decreased with age. ConclusionsLIPUS treatments were frequently used to treat fractures early after osteosynthesis in elderly patients, probably due to the large number of fractures in the elderly population. Additionally, the ratio of LIPUS treatments early after osteosynthesis was high in both elderly female and elderly male patients, suggesting that there is a demand for early fracture repair.

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