| Literature DB >> 30373674 |
Karem M Zekry1,2, Norio Yamamoto3, Katsuhiro Hayashi1, Akihiko Takeuchi1, Ali Zein A A Alkhooly2, Ahmed Saleh Abd-Elfattah2, Ezzat H Fouly2, Adel Refaat Ahmed4, Hiroyuki Tsuchiya1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Benign bone tumors and tumor-like conditions are commonly located in the proximal femur. The main indications for surgical treatment are lesions with impending or actual pathological fractures, or with aggressive or recurrent lesions. However, patients complaining of persistent pain, limping, or abnormal gait patterns are also considered for surgical treatment. In this study, we describe the outcomes of the surgical treatment of benign lytic lesions of the proximal femur by curettage followed by implantation of synthetic bone graft.Entities:
Keywords: Benign lytic lesions; Proximal femur; Synthetic bone graft
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30373674 PMCID: PMC6206894 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-018-0982-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Characteristic details of patient
| No. | Age and gender | Diagnosis | Synthetic substitute | Internal fixation | Follow-up (months) | Operative time (min) | Complication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 18/M | Residual SBC | HA | No | 76 | 100 | – |
| 2 | 31/F | FD | β-TCP -HA | No | 145 | 135 | – |
| 3 | 41/M | SBC | β-TCP | No | 9 | 80 | – |
| 4 | 11/M | FD | β-TCP | No | 57 | 140 | – |
| 5 | 28/M | EG | β-TCP | No | 14 | 140 | – |
| 6 | 21/M | SBC | β-TCP | No | 52 | 95 | – |
| 7 | 65/M | FD | β-TCP | No | 42 | 215 | – |
| 8 | 22/M | CB | β-TCP | No | 10 | 150 | – |
| 9 | 18/F | GCT | β-TCP | No | 98 | 245 | Recurrence |
| 10 | 32/M | CB | β-TCP | No | 127 | 95 | – |
| 11 | 16/M | CB | α-TCP | No | 27 | 150 | – |
| 12 | 28/M | CB | β-TCP | DHS | 144 | 210 | – |
| 13 | 6/M | SBC | β-TCP | No | 30 | 82 | – |
| 14 | 22/F | SBC | α-TCP | No | 64 | 100 | – |
| 15 | 6/M | Recurrent SBC | α-TCP | No | 81 | 92 | – |
| 16 | 21/M | CB | α-TCP | No | 35 | 156 | – |
| 17 | 24/M | Recurrent GCT | α-TCP | Screw | 77 | 212 | – |
| 18 | 32/M | GCT | α-TCP | No | 91 | 220 | – |
| 19 | 20/M | CB | α-TCP | No | 26 | 131 | – |
| 20 | 15/M | Recurrent CB | α-TCP | No | 39 | 157 | – |
| 21 | 12/M | FD | α-TCP | No | 54 | 174 | – |
| 22 | 37/F | FD | α-TCP | No | 41 | 141 | – |
| 23 | 36/M | FD | α-TCP | No | 26 | 148 | – |
| 24 | 27/F | FD | α-TCP | No | 38 | 115 | – |
| 25 | 16/M | SBC | α-TCP | No | 33 | 114 | Fracture |
| 26 | 46/M | FD | β-TCP | DHS | 27 | 123 | – |
| 27 | 38/M | SBC | α-TCP | No | 10 | 139 | – |
α-TCP alpha tricalcium phosphate, β-TCP beta tricalcium phosphate, CB chondroblastoma, DHS dynamic hip screw, EG eosinophilic granuloma, F female, FD fibrous dysplasia, GCT giant cell tumor, HA hydroxyapatite, M male, SBC simple bone cyst
Fig. 1Case presentation representing a 37-year-old female with fibrous dysplasia of the left proximal femur. a, b Anteroposterior and lateral radiographs showing fibrous dysplasia of left proximal femur. c, d MRI of proximal femur showing the fibrous dysplasia lesion with marked cystic change. e, f Post-operative radiographs showing the lesion after curettage and implantation of alpha tricalcium phosphate. g, h Radiographs taken at final follow-up (4 years after surgery)