| Literature DB >> 24496850 |
Tomoji Matsuo1, Taiji Watari, Kiyohito Naito, Atsuhiko Mogami, Kazuo Kaneko, Osamu Obayashi.
Abstract
The patella plays an important role in the knee joint extension, and a patella fracture requires surgical treatment when it is accompanied by displacement of bone fragments and a joint surface gap. In patella fractures, there is disruption of the soft tissue structures that support the knee extension mechanism. We use a method of percutaneous cerclage wiring to fix the patella and include the peripatellar soft tissues in five patients. All cases were closed fractures, and the AO classification was type A in 1 and type C in 4. At a mean follow-up of 11.2 months, union was achieved in four cases with failure in one inferior pole fracture avulsion. There was no extensor lag noted in any patient, with mean flexion at 141° (120-160). As this percutaneous cerclage wiring method includes soft tissue approximation in the wiring, it may be especially suitable for comminuted fractures for which classic tension band wiring techniques cannot be used. We employed this procedure to atraumatically manipulate peripatellar soft tissues together with the fracture fragments in order to obtain optimal restoration of continuity of the extensor mechanism.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24496850 PMCID: PMC3951625 DOI: 10.1007/s11751-014-0184-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Strategies Trauma Limb Reconstr ISSN: 1828-8928
Our series of five patients operated by percutaneous cerclage wiring
| Sex | Age | Side | Direct or indirect | Open or close | AO classification | Type | Delay (days) | Past history | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F | 38 | Lt | Direct | Close | C | 2 part | 8 | – |
| 2 | F | 64 | Rt | Direct | Close | C | 4 part | 5 | DM Depression HT |
| 3 | F | 53 | Rt | Direct | Close | C | 2 part | 5 | – |
| 4 | M | 24 | Rt | Direct | Close | C | 4 part | 8 | – |
| 5 | M | 73 | Lt | Direct | Close | A | 2 part | 2 | HCC DM |
DM diabetes mellitus; HT hypertension; HCC hepatocellular carcinoma
Fig. 1Surgical technique. a Ten-millimetre and 5-mm small medio-lateral skin incisions at the superior and inferior margins of the patella, respectively. b The tip of the inner tube of a Sur-flo (HAKKO ELASTER TYPE-1, HAKKO Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) was bent and used as a cable passer. c Cable, d sleeve: for these, the AI-wiring system (AI-medic Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) was used. e The cable passer was inserted into the patellar tendon through the skin incision at the inferior margin of the patella. f The cable was applied around the patella including the soft tissues, penetrating through the quadriceps femoris tendon on the proximal side, and then passed along the superior margin of the patella. g Frontal view after fixation on plain X-ray radiography, h lateral view after fixation on plain X-ray radiography: two cable wires were passed through the shallow and deep layers, respectively
Results of our series of five patients operated by percutaneous cerclage wiring
| Delay of F/U (month) | ROM | Bone healing | PF OA | Complication | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 11 | 0-0-140 | Union | – | – |
| 2 | 8 | 0-0-120 | Union | – | – |
| 3 | 12 | 0-0-135 | Union | – | Breakage of implant |
| 4 | 21 | 0-0-150 | Union | – | Superficial infection |
| 5 | 4 | 0-0-160 | Non-union | – | Breakage of implant Fixation failure |
F/U follow-up; ROM range of motion; PF patellofemoral joint; OA osteoarthritis
Fig. 2Relationship between the patella and quadriceps femoris and patellar tendons. a MRI, b fluoroscopy: the quadriceps femoris tendon is attached anteroposteriorly to the patella widely at the superior margin but narrow at the inferior margin
Fig. 3Displaced case (Case 5). a Preoperative plain X-ray radiography: AO type A, 2-part fracture. b The patellar tendon was not caught by the wire in the deep layer, and the fractured region was supported only by the wire in the shallow layer. c Plain X-ray radiography 4 months after surgery: the fractured region was displaced