| Literature DB >> 28702088 |
Sönke Labza1, Isabella Fassola2, Benedict Kunz2, Wolfgang Ertel2, Senat Krasnici2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ipsilateral femoral shaft and neck fractures are rare injuries, affecting mostly young patients who sustained high-energy traumas. In 19-50% of cases, the femoral fracture is misdiagnosed or overlooked at the initial presentation, with reportedly increased risk of complications such as non-union and avascular necrosis. We present a case of an ipsilateral femoral neck and shaft fracture, which was missed at initial presentation despite radiographic and computed tomography (CT) scan evaluation. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Femoral neck; Femoral shaft; Femur; Fracture; Ipsilateral; Missed injury; Polytrauma
Year: 2017 PMID: 28702088 PMCID: PMC5504794 DOI: 10.1186/s13037-017-0134-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Saf Surg ISSN: 1754-9493
List of patient’s injuries and ISS
| Region | Injury description | AIS score | top three2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Head or neck | diffuse intracerebral contusion | 3 | |
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| Face | left zygomatic bone fracture | 3 | |
| right temporal fracture | 3 | ||
| right orbital rim fracture | 3 | ||
| right orbital floor fracture | 3 | ||
| Chest | mediastinal contusion | 2 | |
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| Abdomen or pelvis contents | no injury | 0 | |
| Extremities or pelvic girdle |
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| left patella fracture | 2 | ||
| External | alcohol intoxication | 2 | |
| traumatic rhabdomyolysis | 3 | ||
| acute hemorrhagic anemia | 3 | ||
| hypokalemia | 3 | ||
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Only the highest AIS score in each body region is used (highlighted in Bold). The 3 most severely injured body regions have their score squared and added together to produce the ISS score
Fig. 1Pre-operative anteroposterior radiograph of pelvis demonstrating lack of evidence of left femoral neck fracture
Fig. 2Pre-operative CT coronal and axial views of pelvis and of the proximal femur did not show clear evidence of fracture
Fig. 3Follow-up radiograph of pelvis at day 1 post-op, demonstrating displacement of the missed left femoral neck fracture and an ipsilateral patella fracture
Fig. 4Intra-operative fluoroscopic control of a) the cephalomedullary nail, demonstrating a tip-apex-distance of 10 mm and a central position of the lag screw; b) the reduction and osteosynthesis of the patella fracture with a standard figure-of-8 tension band wire
Fig. 5Follow-up radiographs of left hip at day 3 post-op, showing satisfactory reduction and fixation of the left femoral neck and shaft fractures by intramedullary nail and the patella fracture, respectively
Fig. 6Follow-up radiographs (5 months post-op) and CT scan (7 months post-op) of pelvis and left hip, demonstrating lag-screw cut-out with displacement of the femoral neck fracture
Fig. 7Post-operative (12 months) AP pelvic x-ray showing the bipolar hemiarthroplasty following removal of the cephalomedullary nail