Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 1 - 4 of 4
Results per page:
Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 48 - 48
1 Jan 2013
Kadakia A Rambani R Qamar F Mc Coy S Koch L Venkateswaran B
Full Access

Introduction. Clavicle fractures accounting for 3–5% of all adult fractures are usually treated non-operatively. There is an increasing trend towards their surgical fixation. Objective. The aim of our study was to investigate the outcome following titanium elastic stable intramedullary nailing (ESIN) for midshaft non-comminuted clavicle fractures with >20mm shortening/displacement. Methods. 38 patients, which met inclusion criteria, were reviewed retrospectively. There were 32 males and 6 females. The mean age was 27.6 years. The patients were assessed for clinical/radiological union and by Oxford Shoulder and QuickDASH scores. 71% patients required open reduction. Results. 100% union was achieved at average of 11.3 weeks. The average follow-up was 12 months. The average Oxford Shoulder and QuickDASH scores were 45.6 and 6.7 respectively. 47% patients had nail removal. One patient had lateral nail protrusion while other required its medial trimming. Conclusion. In our hands, ESIN is safe and minimally invasive with good patient satisfaction, cosmetic appearance and overall outcome


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 77 - 77
1 Feb 2012
Prathapkumar K Garg N Bruce C
Full Access

Displaced fractures of the radial neck in children can lead to limitation of elbow and forearm movements if left untreated. Several management techniques are available for the treatment of radial neck fractures in children. Open reduction can disturb the blood supply of the soft tissue surrounding the radial head epiphysis and is associated with more complications. We report our experience of treating 14 children between the age of 4 and 13 years, who had severely displaced radial neck fractures (Judet type 111 and 1V). 12 patients were treated with indirect reduction and fixation using the Elastic Stable Intramedullary Nail (ESIN) technique, (3 with assisted percutaneous K-wire reduction) and 2 had open reduction followed by ESIN fixation of the radial head fragment. This method reduces the need for open reduction and thus the complication rate. Three patients had associated fractures of the same forearm which was also treated surgically at the same time. We routinely immobilised the forearm for two weeks and removed the nail in all cases in an average of 12 weeks. We had no complication with implant removal. All 14 patients have been followed up for average of 28 months. One patient (7%) developed asymptomatic avascular necrosis (AVN) of the head of radius. Thirteen patients (93%) had excellent result on final review. One patient had neuropraxia of the posterior interosseous nerve which recovered within 6 weeks. In conclusion we advocate ESIN for the closed reduction and fixation of severely displaced radial neck fractures in children. It remains a useful fixation method even if open reduction is required and allows early mobilisation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 24 - 24
1 Feb 2017
Bah M Suchier Y Denis D Metaizeau J
Full Access

The advent of Elastic Stable Intramedullary Nailing has revolutionised the conservative treatment of long human bone fractures in children (Metaizeau, 1988; Metaizeau et al., 2004). Unfortunately, failures still occur due to excessive bending and fatigue (Linhart et al., 1999; Lascombes et al., 2006), bone refracture or nail failure (Bråten et al., 1993; Weinberg et al., 2003). Ideally, during surgery, nail insertion into the diaphyseal medullary canal should not interrupt or injure cartilage growth; nails should provide an improved rigidity and fracture stabilisation.

This study aims at comparing deflections and stiffnesses of nail-bone assemblies: standard cylindrically-shaped nails (MI) vs. new cylindrical nails (MII) with a flattened face across the entire length allowing more inertia and a curved tip allowing better penetration into the cancellous bone of the metaphysis (Figure 1). MII exhibits a section with two parameters: a diameter C providing nail stiffness and a height C' providing practical dimension when both nails are crossed at the isthmus of the diaphysis: C/C' is set to 1.25 for all MII nails.

A CT scan of a patient aged 22 years was used to segment a 3D model of a 471mm-long right femur model. The medullary canal diameters at the isthmus are 10.8mm and 11.4mm in the ML and AP direction, respectively. Titanium-made CAD models of MI (Ø=4mm) and MII (flat face: Ø=5mm) were pre-curved to maintain their flat face and carefully placed and positioned according to surgeon's instructions. Both nails were inserted via lateral holes in the distal femur with their extremities either bumping against the cortex or lying in the trabecular bone.

Transverse and comminuted fractures were simulated (Figure 1). For each assembly, a Finite Element (FE) tetrahedral mesh was generated (∼100181 nodes and 424398 elements). Grey-scale levels were used to assign heterogeneous material properties to the bone (E=6850 ρ1.49 (Morgan et al., 2003)). Two modes of loading were considered: 4-point bending (varus and recurvatum: Fmax=6000N) and internal torsion (Mmax=70kNmm). This led to the simulation of 15 FE models, including a reference intact femur.

Results show that in valgus, for the transverse (comminuted) fracture, the mean displacement of the assembly decreased by around 50%: from 15.24mm (27.49mm) to 8.15mm (13.85mm) for MI and MII, respectively, compared to 3.59mm for the intact bone. The assembly stiffness increased by 87% and 99% for transverse and comminuted fracture, respectively (Table 1). Similar trends were found in recurvatum with higher increases in assembly stiffness of 170% and 143% for transverse and comminuted fracture, respectively (Table 1). In torsion, for the transverse (comminuted) fracture, the measured angle of rotation decreased from: 0.43rad (0.66rad) to 0.22rad (0.43rad) for MI and MII, respectively, compared to 0.09rad for the intact bone. This corresponded to an increase of 95% and 55% in assembly stiffness for transverse and comminuted fracture, respectively.

In conclusion, using the 5mm-diameter new nails (MII) for the same intramedullar space, during either bending or torsion, assemblies were always stiffer than when using standard cylindrical nails.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 1, Issue 7 | Pages 424 - 430
17 Jul 2020
Baxter I Hancock G Clark M Hampton M Fishlock A Widnall J Flowers M Evans O

Aims

To determine the impact of COVID-19 on orthopaediatric admissions and fracture clinics within a regional integrated care system (ICS).

Methods

A retrospective review was performed for all paediatric orthopaedic patients admitted across the region during the recent lockdown period (24 March 2020 to 10 May 2020) and the same period in 2019. Age, sex, mechanism, anatomical region, and treatment modality were compared, as were fracture clinic attendances within the receiving regional major trauma centre (MTC) between the two periods.