Orthopedic trauma remains a major global health challenge, with rising injury severity and increasingly complex fracture patterns demanding cohesive, evidence-based management. Despite advances in fixation technologies and rehabilitation science, clinical outcomes remain highly variable, largely due to inconsistencies in soft-tissue management, postoperative care, and the integration of emerging technologies. This narrative review synthesizes contemporary literature from the past decade to clarify current best practices and highlight persistent gaps across surgical stabilization, joint reconstruction, biological augmentation, rehabilitation strategies, and patient-specific determinants of healing. A comprehensive search of peer-reviewed sources was conducted to evaluate internal and external fixation methods, arthroplasty applications, soft-tissue reconstruction, rehabilitation protocols, and technological innovations, including 3D printing, computer-assisted navigation systems, and tele-rehabilitation platforms. Findings reveal that early, anatomically precise fixation combined with timely soft-tissue coverage and individualized rehabilitation significantly improves functional outcomes, while complications such as infection, nonunion, and implant failure continue to undermine recovery, particularly in patients with comorbidities or compromised bone quality. Technological advances show strong potential to enhance surgical precision, treatment personalization, and long-term functional outcomes, but remain insufficiently validated in large clinical populations. This review underscores the need for standardized treatment pathways, stronger multidisciplinary coordination, and more rigorous reporting of outcomes to optimize patient-centered recovery and guide future innovations in orthopedic trauma management.
Patil et al. (Sat,) studied this question.