Hip fracture treatment strategies continue to evolve with the goal of restoring hip fracture victims to Pre-injury Functional levels. Strategies for improved treatment have focused on fracture exposure, reduction, provisional fixation and definitive fixation with implant designs optimised for fracture union with minimal implant failure as originally proposed by Lambotte. Multiple implant designs have been conceived based on perceived inadequacies of previous generational designs. To better understand this evolutionary process, it is necessary to review the predecessors of modern fracture treatment and understand their design concepts and results. It is interesting that the modern era of surgical treatment of hip fractures actually began in 1902, when Dr Royal Whitman advocated the necessity of a closed reduction of adult hip fractures under general anesthesia and stabilisation by
We describe a series of 20 patients with ununited fractures of the femoral neck following neglected trauma or failed primary internal fixation who were seen at a mean of 7.5 months (2 to 18) following injury. Open reduction and internal fixation of the fracture was performed in all patients, together with a myoperiosteal flap on the quadratus femoris muscle pedicle. Union occurred at a mean of 4.9 months (2 to 10) in all patients. The mean follow-up was for 70 months (14 to 144). There was no further progression in six of seven patients with pre-operative radiological evidence of osteonecrosis of the femoral head. One patient had delayed collapse and flattening of the femoral head ten years after union of the fracture, but remained asymptomatic. This study demonstrates the orthopaedic application of myoperiosteal grafting for inducing osteogenesis in a difficult clinical situation.