| Literature DB >> 22562084 |
Kwang Soon Song1, Kirti Ramnani, Chul Hyun Cho, Ki Cheor Bae, Kyung Jae Lee, Eun Seok Son.
Abstract
Concomitant ipsilateral fractures of the neck and shaft of the femur in children are rare. The most recent report in this context found a total of only nine reported cases (<12 years of age) following a search of the indexed English literature. These injuries occur in children due to high-velocity trauma, and there is no generally accepted method of treatment. We report three additional cases from the literature and two cases of our own. In our cases, one had a residual 10° varus deformity at the subtrochanteric level in the femur, but this did not affect hip function. Another patient exhibited a limp at final follow-up due to leg length discrepancy, and peroneal nerve palsy at the time of injury. We advocate operative stabilization of the femoral shaft fracture first to reduce the risk of further displacement and simplify the subsequent reduction of the femoral neck. The series shows that these rare injuries have a poor prognosis, with high rates of incidence of avascular necrosis, coxa vara, and leg length discrepancy.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22562084 PMCID: PMC3667384 DOI: 10.1007/s10195-012-0188-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Traumatol ISSN: 1590-9921
Fig. 1Eight-year-old girl: anteroposterior radiographs reveal a cervicotrochanteric fracture (type III in Delbet’s classification; AO classification type II) with a subtrochanteric fracture of the left femur
Fig. 2Eight-year-old girl: lateral radiographs reveal a cervicotrochanteric fracture (type III in Delbet’s classification; AO classification type II) with a subtrochanteric fracture of the left femur
Fig. 3The neck femur fracture was fixed with a single cannulated screw 3.5 mm in diameter and three Steinmann pins 2 mm in diameter, the subtrochanteric fracture was fixed with a five-hole compression plate, and the proximal fragment was fixed with a single screw to avoid impingement during fixation of the femoral neck fracture
Fig. 4After removing the cast at two months postoperatively, the radiograph showed a 10° varus deformity of the subtrochanteric fracture with proximal screw back-out
Fig. 5Telereontgenogram shows no evidence of avascular necrosis of the femoral head or growth disturbance except for the residual 10° varus deformity at the subtrochanteric level in the femur
Fig. 6Boy seven years and ten months of age: anteroposterior and lateral radiographs reveal a right intertochanteric fracture (type IV in Delbet’s classification; AO classification type III) and an ipsilateral lower one-third fracture of the femoral shaft
Fig. 7At six weeks after the operation, the radiographs show well-maintained reduction. The patient was started on non-weight-bearing active exercises
Fig. 8At two-year follow up, radiographs show union of the femoral neck fracture without avascular necrosis of the femoral head
Fig. 9At two-year follow up, radiographs show overgrowth of the right femur of 1.5 cm
Patients demographics
| Case | CaseAuthor | Age | Side | Mode of | Femoral neck fx | Shaft | Associated injuries | Management | Union | Coxa | Avascular necrosis | Follow-up | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Present series (case 1) | 8/F | Left | Road crash | Cervicotrochanteric (Delbet type III; AO type II) | Sub trochanteric | 1 screw & 3 Kirshner wires for the neck fracture, 5-hole plate and 3 screws for the shaft fracture | 4 | No | No | 52 | Good Ratliff score. Clinically good with a 10° varus deformity at the subtrochanteric level in the femur | |
| 2 | Present series (case 2) | 8/M | Right | Road crash | Intertrochanteric (Delbet type IV; AO type II) | Distal third | Lateral condyle fracture of the right humerus, distal radius fracture of left wrist fx, subdural hemorrhage of brain, ipsilateral sciatic nerve palsy (peroneal division) | 2 screws for the neck fracture, 6-hole plate and screws for the shaft fracture | 3 | Yes | No | 25 | Good Ratliff score. Clinically good except for only a slightly short neck and a 1.5 cm leg length discrepancy |
| 3 | Akahane | 2/F | Right | Road crash | Transepiphyseal (Delbet type Ib; AO epiphyseal type 1) | Distal third | Open reduction and internal fixation with 2 smooth Kirshner wires for neck fracture, hip spica cast. A-frame orthosis for the capital epiphysis | 1.5 | Yes | Yes (mild) | 24 | Clinically good, with some coxa vara and premature physeal closure of the medial segent at the 2-year follow-up | |
| 4 | Cannon | 2/F | Left | Fall from height | Transepiphyseal (Delbet type Ia; AO epiphyseal type I) | Midshaft | Closed reduction and hip spica cast for the neck fracture, and 4-hole plate screws for the shaft fracture | 2 | No | No | 12 | Excellent, except for some coxa vara | |
| 5 | Schwarz | 10/M | Right | Cervicotrochanteric (Delbet type III; AO type II) | Distal epiphyseal | 1 screw and 2 pins for the neck fracture on day 23, conservative for the distal physeal fracture | No comment | Yes | Yes (severe) | 188 | Aspherical head, coxa vara, short femoral neck, reversed articulotrochantric distance. Valgus and recurvatum deformity of the distal femur |