Biomechanically, a 2° screw deviation from the nominal axis in the PFLCP leads to significantly earlier implant failure. Screw deviation relies on a technical error on insertion, but in our opinion cannot be controlled intraoperatively with the existing instrumentation devices. Several cases of clinical failure have been reported for the Proximal Femoral Locking Compression Plate (PFLCP). The current study was designed to investigate the failure mode and to explore biomechanically the underlying mechanism. Specifically, the study sought to determine if the observed failure was due to technical error on insertion or due to implant design.Summary
Background
Retrospective review of eighteen patients with sacral fracture dislocations and cauda equina deficits treated with posterior sacral decompression and lumbopelvic fixation. At mean nineteen-month follow-up, all fractures healed without loss of alignment despite immediate full weight-bearing. Fifteen patients (83%) improved neurologically, and ten patients (56%) had full bowel/ bladder recovery. Complications consisted mainly of infection (17%) and asymptomatic rod breakage (33%). This series demonstrates the clinical effectiveness of lumbopelvic fixation, allowing the application to sacral injuries of decompression and fixation principles commonly used in fractures with neurologic deficits that occur in more rostral areas of the spine. To evaluate the results of sacral decompression and lumbopelvic fixation for sacral fracture-dislocations with neurologic deficits. Lumbopelvic fixation provided the stability necessary for full weight-bearing without loss of fracture reduction despite extensive sacral decompression. The functional neurologic improvement in most patients and complete neurologic recovery in all but one patient with intact lumbosacral roots are encouraging. The effectiveness of lumbopelvic fixation facilitates the application of principles of early decompression and stabilization to sacral fracture-dislocations. Sacral fractures healed in all eighteen patients without loss of reduction. Average sacral kyphosis improved from forty-one to twenty-four degrees. Fifteen patients (83%) had normalization or improvement of bowel and bladder deficits, although only ten patients (56%) had improved Gibbons scores. Average Gibbons type improved from four to 2.8 at nineteen-month average follow-up. Rod breakage (33%) and infection (17%) were the most common complications. Recovery of bowel and bladder function was less likely in patients with disruption of any lumbosacral root (36% vs. 86%, p=.066) and complete deficits (47% vs. 100%, p=.241) although the small cohort size precluded statistical significance. Retrospective review of medical records, radiographs, and prospectively collected data of eighteen consecutive patients with sacral fracture-dislocations and cauda equina deficits identified between 1997 and 2002 through institutional databases. Treatment consisted of open reduction, sacral decompression and lumbopelvic fixation. Radiographic and clinical results of treatment were evaluated. Neurologic outcome was measured by Gibbons’ criteria. Please contact author for figures and diagrams.
Pilon injuries without fibula fractures may be associated with increased tibial plafond fracture severity. To evaluate this, we used the rank order technique, with traumatologists blinded to the fibular injury, who ranked the radiographic severity of forty pilon injuries with and without fibula fractures. Pilon injuries with fibular fractures were ranked as more severe than those without. C-type injuries were ranked as more severe than B-type. Fibular fracture was more frequently associated with C-type injury than B-type. The presence of an intact fibula is To determine if the absence of a fibular fracture is predictive of tibial pilon fracture severity. Fibular status is not predictive of a more severe injury to the tibial pilon, and is more commonly associated with the less severe B-type injuries. Absence of an ipsilateral fibular fracture in patients with tibial pilon injuries may predict a more severe tibial plafond injury pattern. Presumably, the energy is completely absorbed by the tibia resulting in more severe epimetaphyseal injury. The reverse relationship, however, was identified. This fact may aid in prognosis and treatment strategies. Twenty consecutive pilon injuries without associated fibular fractures were matched 1:1 to an age/gender-matched cohort of pilon injuries with fibular fractures. Initial radiographs were digitized, the fibular image concealed, and then independently ranked (One, least severe; forty, most severe) by three orthopaedic traumatologists according to tibial plafond fracture severity. Injuries were classified using AO/OTA guidelines. Inter-observer agreement was moderate (κ =0.6). Mean rank for pilon injuries with fibula fractures was 24.4 versus 16.7 for those without (t = 0.02). C-type injuries demonstrated a mean of 10.3 for those with fibular fractures versus 8.7 for those without (t = 0.5). Mean rank for B-type injuries was 11.1 versus 24.5 for C-type injuries (t = 0.001). Overall, tibial pilon injuries with fibular fractures are more severe than those without. C-type injuries with or without fibular fractures are equally severe. C-type injuries were ranked significantly more severe than B-type. Fibular fracture was more frequently associated with C-type injury than B-type.