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E-grāmata: Orthogeriatrics: The Management of Older Patients with Fragility Fractures

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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Practical Issues in Geriatrics
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Aug-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030481261
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Practical Issues in Geriatrics
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Aug-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030481261

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Open access publication has been possible through an unconditional educational grant from UCB.

This new open access edition supported by the Fragility Fracture Network aims at giving the widest possible dissemination on fragility fracture (especially hip fracture) management and notably in countries where this expertise is sorely needed. It has been extensively revised and updated by the experts of this network to provide a unique and reliable content in one single volume.





Throughout the book, attention is given to the difficult question of how to provide best practice in countries where the discipline of geriatric medicine is not well established and resources for secondary prevention are scarce.  The revised and updated chapters on the epidemiology of hip fractures, osteoporosis, sarcopenia, surgery, anaesthesia, medical management of frailty, peri-operative complications, rehabilitation and nursing are supplemented by six new chapters. These include an overview of the multidisciplinary approach to fragility fractures and new contributions on pre-hospital care, treatment in the emergency room, falls prevention, nutrition and systems for audit. The reader will have an exhaustive overview and will gain essential, practical knowledge on how best to manage fractures in elderly patients and how to develop clinical systems that do so reliably.
Part I Background
1 The Multidisciplinary Approach to Fragility Fractures Around the World: An Overview
3(16)
David Marsh
Paul Mitchell
Paolo Falaschi
Lauren Beaupre
Jay Magaziner
Hannah Seymour
Matthew Costa
2 Epidemiology of Fragility Fractures and Social Impact
19(16)
Nicola Veronese
Helgi Kolk
Stefania Maggi
3 Osteoporosis and Fragility in Elderly Patients
35(18)
Paolo Falaschi
Andrea Marques
Stefania Giordano
4 Frailty and Sarcopenia
53(16)
Finbarr C. Martin
Anette Hylen Ranhoff
Part II Pillar I: Co-management in the Acute Episode
5 Establishing an Orthogeriatric Service
69(14)
Terence Ong
Opinder Sahota
6 Pre-hospital Care and the Emergency Department
83(12)
Alex Ritchie
Andrew Imrie
Julia Williams
Alice Cook
Helen Wilson
7 Pre-operative Medical Assessment and Optimisation
95(16)
Helen Wilson
Amy Mayor
8 Orthogeriatric Anaesthesia
111(14)
Stuart M. White
9 Hip Fracture: The Choice of Surgery
125(18)
Henrik Palm
10 Proximal Humeral Fractures: The Choice of Treatment
143(12)
Stig Brorson
Henrik Palm
11 Post-operative Management
155(28)
Giulio Pioli
Chiara Bendini
Paolo Pignedoli
Part III Pillar II: Rehabilitation
12 Rehabilitation Following Hip Fracture
183(40)
Suzanne M. Dyer
Monica R. Perracini
Toby Smith
Nicola J. Fairhall
Ian D. Cameron
Catherine Sherrington
Maria Crotty
13 The Psychological Health of Patients and their Caregivers
223(18)
Stefano Eleuteri
Maria Eduarda Batista de Lima
Paolo Falaschi
Part IV Pillar III: Secondary Prevention
14 Fracture Risk Assessment and How to Implement a Fracture Liaison Service
241(16)
Nicholas R. Fuggle
M. Kassim Javaid
Masaki Fujita
Philippe Halbout
Bess Dawson-Hughes
Rene Rizzoli
Jean-Yves Reginster
John A. Kanis
Cyrus Cooper
15 Current and Emerging Treatment of Osteoporosis
257(16)
Laura Tafaro
Nicola Napoli
16 How Can We Prevent Falls?
273(20)
Hubert Blain
Stephanie Miot
Pierre Louis Bernard
Part V Cross-Cutting Issues
17 Nursing in the Orthogeriatric Setting
293(18)
Julie Santy-Tomlinson
Karen Hertz
Charlotte Myhre-Jensen
Louise Brent
18 Nutritional Care of the Older Patient with Fragility Fracture: Opportunities for Systematised, Interdisciplinary Approaches Across Acute Care, Rehabilitation and Secondary Prevention Settings
311(20)
Jack J. Bell
Olof Gudny Geirsdottir
Karen Hertz
Julie Santy-Tomlinson
Sigrun Sunna Skiiladottir
Stefano Eleuteri
Antony Johansen
19 Fragility Fracture Audit
331
Cristina Ojeda-Thies
Louise Brent
Colin T. Currie
Matthew Costa
Paolo Falaschi was awarded a First Class Honours Degree in Medicine and Surgery in 1972, and he received Postgraduate Higher Medical Diplomas in Endocrinology and Pathology in 1975 and 1976 respectively. He was a Visiting Fellow at the Department of Endocrinology, St. Bartholomews Hospital, London before completing a Postgraduate Course in Endocrinology at the University of London in 1977. From 1980 to 1981 he was a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Department of Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, USA. From 1974 a 1988 he was researcher at Romes Sapienza State University, and till 1999 he was an Associate Professor of Internal Medicine at Naples Federico II University.

From 2004 to 2017 he was coordinator of the Integrated Medico-Surgical and Geriatrics Course in Medicine and Surgery at the Faculty of Medicine and Psychology at Sapienza University. Further, he was the Director of the Masters Course in Case Management within the integrated network of services to the elderly; President of the Nursing Course at Romes Sapienza University (from 2000 to 2010); and Vice-president of the degree course in Medicine and Surgery at the Medical Faculty of the same University (between 2000 and 2008). He has coordinated numerous research projects in the field of clinical geriatrics and published more than 500 papers in peer-review journals. He has now retired from clinical and university roles but  is actively involved in the field of osteoporosis and fragility fractures. He is past president and chair of education committee of the Fragility Fracture Network.











David Russell Marsh graduated in Medicine from Cambridge University in 1975 and was awarded his FRCS(Eng) in 1980.  He holds a research-based higher degree (MD) on the subject of measuring peripheral nerve function in the upper limb - from the University of Cambridge 1990.

As Senior Lecturer in Orthopaedics at the University of Manchester (1989 to 1997), he established his clinical subspecialty of limb reconstruction, and was one of the early adopters of the Ilizarov technique in the UK. From 1997 to 2005 he was Professor of Trauma and Orthopaedics at Queens University in Belfast and from 2005 to 2012 he was Professor of Clinical Orthopaedics at University College London. He was a Visiting Professor in Orthogeriatrics at the Sapienza University of Rome. 





His research interests focused on the biology of fracture healing and distraction osteogenesis; tissue engineering of bone; treatment of osteoporosis and fragility fractures; clinical trials of fracture treatment; and measurement of outcome in fractures and limb reconstruction.  He led the establishment of the UK National Hip Fracture Database and was awarded an Honorary Fellowship by both the British Orthopaedic Association and the Orthopaedic Trauma Society in recognition of this work.





He has now retired fromclinical and university roles, but remains active in the field of fragility fractures. He was the founding President of the Fragility Fracture Network and remains internationally active in that organization.