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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

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Obesity

Thomas Jefferson University

2013

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

The Effect Of Malnutrition On Patients Undergoing Elective Joint Arthroplasty., Ronald Huang, Md, Max Greenky, Bs, Glenn J. Kerr, Md, Mathew S. Austin, Md, Javad Parvizi, Md, Frcs Sep 2013

The Effect Of Malnutrition On Patients Undergoing Elective Joint Arthroplasty., Ronald Huang, Md, Max Greenky, Bs, Glenn J. Kerr, Md, Mathew S. Austin, Md, Javad Parvizi, Md, Frcs

Rothman Institute Faculty Papers

Malnutrition has been linked to serious complications in patients undergoing elective total joint arthroplasty (TJA). This study prospectively evaluated 2,161 patients undergoing elective TJA for malnutrition as defined by either an abnormal serum albumin or transferrin. The overall incidence of malnutrition was 8.5% (184 of 2,161) and the rate of overall complications in the malnourished group was 12% as compared to 2.9% in patients with normal parameters (P55years-old undergoing TJA and is associated with a significant increase in post-operative complications.


The Influence Of Obesity On The Outcome Of Treatment Of Lumbar Disc Herniation: Analysis Of The Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial (Sport)., Jeffrey A Rihn, Mark Kurd, Alan S Hilibrand, Jon Lurie, Wenyan Zhao, Todd Albert, James Weinstein Jan 2013

The Influence Of Obesity On The Outcome Of Treatment Of Lumbar Disc Herniation: Analysis Of The Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial (Sport)., Jeffrey A Rihn, Mark Kurd, Alan S Hilibrand, Jon Lurie, Wenyan Zhao, Todd Albert, James Weinstein

Rothman Institute Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND: Questions remain as to the effect that obesity has on patients managed for symptomatic lumbar disc herniation. The purpose of this study was to determine if obesity affects outcomes following the treatment of symptomatic lumbar disc herniation.

METHODS: An as-treated analysis was performed on patients enrolled in the Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial for the treatment of lumbar disc herniation. A comparison was made between patients with a body mass index of/m² (nonobese) (n = 854) and those with a body mass index of ≥30 kg/m² (obese) (n = 336). Baseline patient demographic and clinical characteristics were documented. Primary …