The benefit of using a long intramedullary device for the treatment of geriatric
The most frequent mechanical failure in the osteosynthesis of intertrochanteric fractures is the cut-out. Fracture pattern, reduction quality, tip-apex distance or the position of the cervico-cephalic screw are some of the factors that have been associated with higher cut-out rates. To date, it has not been established whether underlying bacterial colonization or concomitant infection may be the cause of osteosynthesis failure in proximal femur fractures (PFF). The primary objective of this study is to assess the incidence of infection in patients with cut-out after PFF osteosynthesis. Retrospective cohort study on patients with cut-out after PFF osteosynthesis with endomedullary nail, from January 2007 to December 2020. Demographic data of patients (such as sex, age, ASA), fracture characteristics (pattern, laterality, causal mechanism) and initial surgery parameters were collected (time from fall to intervention, duration of surgery, intraoperative complications). Radiographic parameters were also analyzed (tip-apex distance and Chang criteria). In all cut-out cases, 5 microbiological cultures and 1 anatomopathological sample were taken and the osteosynthesis material was sent for sonication. Fracture-related infection (FRI) was diagnosed based on Metsemakers et al (2018) and McNally et al (2020) diagnostic criteria.Aim
Method
Purpose. To compare the clinical and radiological results between internal fixation using the proximal femoral nail system and bipolar hemiarthroplasty in reverse oblique
Introduction. Deformity after femoral osteotomy varies between patients. Some researchers reported good results when using cemented stems for the hips after femoral osteotomy, but there are many disadvantages that obstruct ideal fixation using cemented stems. Therefore, we developed cementless custom-made stems and inserted those using a computed tomography (CT) –based navigation system. Methods. Eighteen dysplastic hips of 15 patients after
Introduction. In comminuted intertrochanteric fractures, various operative options have been introduced. The purpose of this study was to determine whether there were differences in clinical and radiologic outcomes among bipolar hemiarthroplasty(BH), compression hip screw(CHS) and proximal femur nail antirotatory(PFNA) in treating comminuted
Failure of intertrochanteric fracture fixation often occurs in patients, who have poor bone quality, severe osteoporosis, or unstable fracture patterns. Hip arthroplasty is a good replacement procedure even though it involves technical issues such as implant removal, bone loss, poor bone quality, trochanteric nonunion and difficulty of surgical exposure. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the outcomes of total hip arthroplasty (THA) as the replacement for failed fixation of intertrochanteric fractures of the femur. 203 patients of failed intertrochanteric fractures between April 2009 and October 2014 were included in the study. All of them underwent total hip arthroplasty through direct lateral approach. 150 patients were male (73.8%) and 53 patients (26.1%) were female and the mean of age was 59.02±10.34 years old (range: 56–90 years). The indications of the failure were nail cut out in 174 (85.7%), non-union in 15 (7.3%), plate failure in 14 cases (6.8%). One patient underwent two-stage protocol due to infection. We evaluated the possible clinical and radiological complications and measured functional outcome with modified Harris hip score (MHHS). We used cementless cup in nearly all of patients (95.2%), cementless long stem in 88.1% of patients.Introduction
Patients and Methods
Four parts inter trochanteric fracture of femur are commonest in elderly people. DHS fixation is gold standard treatment of such fractures. Various Complications of DHS implant are reported in the literature. However, Hip Instability: Subluxation and Dislocation is very rare. We report, five cases of Hip instability following DHS fixation surgery. This is a retrospective study conducted at ACPM Medical College, Dhule. We found only five cases that developed hip instability after DHS fixation since 1997. Available clinical notes and X-rays of these patients were studied to get the relevant information.Introduction
Materials and Methods
Literature suggests in senile IT fracture group with osteoporosis and comminution, the rates of complications are very high. Documented figures show 16% deaths in non-operative treatment and 16% (late) non-union IT fractures in non operative treatment. The post fixation re-operation rate is 23% after two to three years. High rate implant cutout, penetration and plate cutout leads to increased morbidity and mortality again. The aim of this study is to find out the results of primary prosthetic replacement in comminuted, osteoporotic intertrochanteric fractures in elderly patients. Eight patients of the age group from 68 to 94 years (average 78.4) with four part fractures were operated primarily with bipolar hemiarthroplasty. They were operated by posterolateral approach and the hip joint was exposed through the fracture site itself. After pan release the proximal fragment was delivered and a modular locally manufactured cemented bipolar hemiarthroplasty was performed. Due care was taken to restore offset, limb length and soft tissue balancing. The patients were mobile early after two days with walker and they became independent within four weeks after operation. They were followed up from six months to 3.5 years (average 2.1 years). The functional and radiological evaluation was done. There were five females and three males. The modified Charnley score improved from average 2.3 pre-operatively to an average of 5.2 with respect to pain, mobility and function. All the patients were happy and independent. One patient developed abductor lurch, but managed to carry out independently all her activities of daily living. One patient had a dislocation. This lady was very unco-operative and never helped in the rehabilitation programme. She lost to follow-up. Radiologically, there were no signs of loosening, progressive adiolucent lines, subsidence or osteolysis at the latest follow-up. Primary prosthetic hemi-replacement in cases of osteoporotic four part fractures in elderly patients helps early restoration of function and thereby prevents complications.
The reverse obliquity fractures of the proximal femur are anatomically and mechanically different from most intertrochanteric fractures. These fractures are complex and very difficult to treat. To evaluate the results of the treatment of reverse obliquity intertrochanteric fractures with cephalomedullary nails. Between 2005 and 2009, 1179 extracapsular fractures of the proximal femur were treated at our institution. Retrospective review of these x-rays identified 59 patients with reverse obliquity fracture pattern. We analysed our results of cephalomedullary nailing of these complex fractures and evaluated factors responsible for failure of fixation.Introduction
Materials and Methods
Failed operated intertrochanteric fractures (with screw cutout, joint penetration, varus collapse, nonunion, or femoral head avascular necrosis) pose treatment dilemmas. The ideal approach is re-osteosynthesis with autologous bone grafting. When the femoral head is unsalvageable, conversion to a prosthetic hip replacement is necessary. Thirty-seven patients with failed dynamic hip screw fixation (and unsalvageable femoral heads) were treated with cementless hip arthroplasty (13 underwent Bipolar Arthroplasty, 24 had Total Hip Arthroplasty) over a 5-year period (Dec 2005 to Nov 2010). Seven needed a modified trochanteric split, and the rest were managed by standard anterolateral approach. Abductor mechanism was reconstructed using strong nonabsorbable sutures (ethibond 5) or stainless steel wires. The calcar was partially reconstructed using remnant femoral head and cerclage wiring in a few cases.Introduction
Materials/Methods
Failures of internal fixation after intertrochanteric fractures pose great challenge to orthopaedic surgeons. Hip arthroplasty can be a remedy for such failures, however, the selection of femoral stem length is controversial. This study aims to report our experience of managing failed internal fixation after intertrochanteric fractures with standard femoral stem arthroplasty. A retrospective review of patients who were managed with hip arthroplasty for failed internal fixation after intertrochanteric fractures in the First Affiliated Hospital of Fujian Medical University, P.R. China between January 2001 to December 2013 was performed. Patients’ age, gender, pre- and postoperative Harris Hip Score (HHS), femoral stem types and surgical outcomes were traced and analyzed.Objective
Methods
To evaluate outcome after cementless bipolar hemiarthroplasties using a standard(tapered, rectangular) stem for the treatment of above type A2 fractures in elderly patients. We reviewed the records of 37 patients who underwent bipolar hemiarthroplasty between February 2006 and Feburuary 2010 in our hospital who were followed for more than two years after surgery. The mean patient age was 73.5 years old (range 64∼88 years old). 16 patients were men, and 21 patients were women. We evaluated the results by analyzing operation time, amount of bleeding, recovery of walking ability, complications and radiologic findings.Purpose
Material and methods
Prospective Randomised Control trial of 300 patients over a period of 3 years, 1 year post op follow up. Local ethic approval was attained for the study. Inclusion criteria: Age > 60, Consented to Participate in the study, Unstable Inter trochanteric fracture a) Sub trochanteric b) Medial Comminution c) Reverse Obliquity D)Severe Osteoporosis. Patients selected were randomized to Intra medullary Nail vs Hips screw. Variety of markers have been assessed: Pre OP: - Mechanism of injury, Mobility status, Pre OP ASA, Pre Op haemoglobin, living Conditions. Intra OP:- I.I Time, Time taken, Surgeon experience, Intra OP complications. Post OP:- Haemoglobin, mobility, radiographic analysis-Fracture stability and Tip Apex Distance, Thrombo embolic Complications. Follow up: - 6 weeks, 3,6,12 month follow up. There is considerable debate in literature regarding superiority of Compression Hip screw over Intra medullary nail for fixation of stable per trochanteric fractures of the femur. Biomechanical studies have shown superiority of Intra medullary device over a Compression Hip screw. Tenser et all showed an advantage over combined bending and compression failure. Mohammad et al found unstable subtrochanteric fractures with a gamma nail were stiffer. Kerush-Brinker showed that gamma nail had significantly greater fatigue strength and fatigue life. In unstable fractures Baumgartner et al found less intra op complications and less fluoroscopic time for a compression hip screw compared to a short intra medullary nail. There have been significant reports of fracture at the Tip of a short intra medullary nail. We think this complication can be avoided by using a long intra medullary device. Both in Australia and abroad the choice of which device to use depends largely on the preference of the surgeon.
Background. Dynamic Hip Screw (DHS) is the most frequently used implant in management of
Failure of cephalomedullary fixation for proximal femur fractures is an uncommon event associated with significant morbidity to the patient and cost to the healthcare system. This institution changed nailing system from the PFNA (DePuy Synthes) to InterTan (Smith and Nephew) in February 2020. To assess for non-inferiority, a retrospective review was performed on 247 patients treated for unstable proximal femur fractures (AO 31 A2; A3). Patients were identified through manual review of fluoroscopic images. Stable fracture patterns were excluded (AO 31 A1). Pre/post operative imaging, demographic data, operative time and ASA scores assessed. Internal/external imaging and national joint registry data were reviewed for follow up. No significant difference was found in overall failure rate of PFNA vs InterTan (4.84% vs 3.23%; p = 0.748). Overall, short nails were more likely to fail by cut-out than long nails (7.5% vs 1.2%; p = 0.015). Nails which failed by varus cut-out had a higher tip/apex distance (TAD) (26.2mm vs 17.0mm; p < 0.001). Of concern, varus cut-out occurred in two InterTan nails with TAD of <25mm. The PFNA enjoyed a shorter operative time for both the short (59.1 vs 71.8 mins; p = 0.022) and long nails (98.8 vs 114.3 mins; p = 0.016) with no difference in 120-day survival rate. Overall failure rates of the PFNA and InterTan nailing systems were comparable. However, the failure rate of short nails in this study is concerning. Using long nails with a lag screw design for unstable
In 2007, the National Hip Fracture Database (NHFD) was conceived in the United Kingdom (UK) as a national audit aiming to improve hip fracture care across the country. It now represents the world's largest hip fracture registry. The purpose of the NHFD is to evaluate aspects of best practice for hip fracture care, at an institutional level, that reflect the evidence-based clinical guidelines and quality standards developed by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. No national program currently exists, equivalent to the NHFD, in Canada despite evidence suggesting that national audit programs can significantly improve patient outcomes. The purpose of this study was to evaluate aspects of best practice for hip fractures at our Canadian academic tertiary referral center using the Key Performance Indicators (KPI) and benchmarks used by the NHFD. In doing so, we aimed to compare our performance to other hospitals contributing to the NHFD database. A retrospective cohort study was conducted on consecutive patients who presented to our Canadian center for surgical management of a hip fracture between August 2019 to September 2020. Fracture types included
Elderly patients undergoing surgery for a hip fracture are at risk of thromboembolic events (TEV). The risk of TEV is now rare due to thromboprophylaxis. However, hip fracture treatment has evolved over the last decade. The risk of TEV may have been modified. The objective of this study was to determine the risk of symptomatic TEV following surgery for a hip fracture, in an elderly population. Retrospective cohort study of all patients > 65 years old undergoing surgery for a femoral neck or
The Failed Femoral Neck Fracture. For the young patient: Attempt to preserve patient's own femoral head. Clinical results reasonably good even if there are patches of avascular necrosis. Preferred methods of salvage: valgus-producing
Purpose. To observe the follow-up results of standard cemented bipolar hemiarthroplasty with double loop and tension band wiring technique for treatment of unstable
Cases of