Medical-surgical complications and their impact on patients' return to work whilst follow-up major lower-limb amputations in Hospital del Trabajador in Santiago (HTS)
Abstract
Introduction: The presence of different complications whilst follow-up amputee patients reaches 10-80%. The main objective of this research is to assess the impact of these in the return-to-work of lower-limb traumatic amputation cases. Materials and methods: A retrospective cohort research was carried out. Clinic-demographic variables information was recollected in order to assess its linkage to different medical-surgical complications and functional outcomes. Survival curves were created to evaluate the return-to-work of patients with and without complications. Results: A total of 46 patients, on average aged 45.7 years old (91.3% men, 71.7% without comorbidities), were included on this research. The most frequent level of amputation was transtibial (65.2%). Residual limb pain, phantom pain, dermatological-infectious complications and painful neuroma were registered in 80.4%, 58.7%, 50% y 30.4% of the cases respectively. Half of the patients had returned to their workplace after 2 years of post-surgical follow-up. The return-to-work rates were significantly lower in patients suffering from residual limb pain (p = 0.0083) and from painful neuroma (p = 0.0051). Conclusion: Complications are frequent during traumatic-amputee patientsâ follow-up and, some of them, may impact on the return-to-work rate.
Más información
| Título según WOS: | Medical-surgical complications and their impact on patients' return to work whilst follow-up major lower-limb amputations in Hospital del Trabajador in Santiago (HTS) |
| Título según SCOPUS: | Medical-surgical complications and their impact on patientsâ return to work whilst follow-up major lower-limb amputations in Hospital del Trabajador in Santiago (HTS) |
| Título de la Revista: | Rehabilitacion |
| Volumen: | 58 |
| Número: | 3 |
| Editorial: | EDICIONES DOYMA S/L |
| Fecha de publicación: | 2024 |
| Idioma: | English, Spanish |
| DOI: |
10.1016/j.rh.2024.100850 |
| Notas: | ISI, SCOPUS |