| Literature DB >> 30410578 |
Boris A Zelle1, Antonio J Webb1, Christopher Matson2, Michael Morwood3, Khang H Dang1, Samuel S Ornell1, Gabrielle Gostigian2, Cody M Ramirez1, Hassan Mir3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Recent advances have led to the design of a new cephalomedullary nail, which aims to decrease the risk of failures in patients with intertrochanteric hip fractures by allowing for insertion of two interdigitating screws into the head segment. The goal of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of this two-screw cephalomedullary nailing system. PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS: Patients 18 years of age and older who underwent intramedullary nailing of their intertrochanteric femoral fracture using the InterTAN nailing system (Smith and Nephew, Memphis, TN) from 2012 to 2016 were included in this retrospective study which was performed at two urban certified level-1 trauma centers and one urban certified level-3 trauma center. The study data was collected through a retrospective chart review and review of the existing radiographic studies. Primary outcome measure was mechanical hardware failure and screw cutout. Secondary outcome measures included nonunion, malunion, medical and surgical complications.Entities:
Keywords: Cephalomedullary nail; Intertrochanteric fracture; Mechanical failure; Safety
Year: 2018 PMID: 30410578 PMCID: PMC6218954 DOI: 10.1186/s13037-018-0177-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Saf Surg ISSN: 1754-9493
Fig. 1a-c. Unstable intertrochanteric femur fracture with lateral wall involvement (1a-b). Sterile preparation of patient on fracture table with incision marked approximately three fingerbreadths above the greater trochanter (1c)
Fig. 2a-d. Starting point at greater trochanter as demonstrated on AP (2a-b) and lateral view (2c-d)
Fig. 3a-b. Pin position for lag screw placement on AP (3a) and lateral view (3b)
Fig. 4a-b. Placement of anti-rotation bar
Fig. 5a-b. Drilling for the lag screw
Fig. 6a-b. Insertion of the lag screw with the anti-rotation bar in place
Fig. 7a-c. Placement of compression screw interdigitating with the lag screw
Fig. 8a-e. Additional stability by distal interlocking screw (8a). Side view of the nail and AP fluoroscopic picture before (8b-c) and after (8d-e) tightening down the set screw
Fig. 9a-b. Final construct (9a) with corresponding AP fluoroscopic picture (9b)
Fig. 10Final closure after minimal-invasive procedure through three relatively small incisions
Fig. 11a-c. InterTAN nail construct front view (11a) and lateral view (11b) showing trapezoidal proximal nail profile. Clothespin distal tip seen on lateral view of the nail (11b) lateral fluoroscopic image (11c)
Patient demographics
| Age [years] | Mean 67.9 (Range 18–98) |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Female | 144 (54.5%) |
| Male | 120 (45.5%) |
| Diabetes mellitus | |
| No | 202 (76.5%) |
| Yes | 60 (22.7%) |
| Unknown | 2 (0.8%) |
| Body mass index [kg/m2] | 26.1 (Range 12.2 to 54.9) |
| Obesity | |
| Non-obese (BMI < 30.0 kg/m2) | 205 (77.7%) |
| Obese (BMI ≥ 30.0 kg/m2) | 59 (22.3%) |
| Injury mechanism | |
| Ground level fall | 182 (68.9%) |
| Fall from height | 30 (11.4%) |
| Motor vehicle collision | 19 (7.2%) |
| Farm injury (attack by horse, bull, sheep) | 4 (1.5%) |
| Bicycle accident | 4 (1.5%) |
| Motorcycle collision | 7 (2.7%) |
| Gunshot injury | 2 (0.8%) |
| Motor vehicle versus pedestrian collision | 3 (1.1%) |
| Crushed injury | 2 (0.8%) |
| Other (golf cart, ATV, jet ski) | 11 (4.2%) |
Clinical data
| OTA/AO Fracture Classification | |
|---|---|
| A 1.1 | 45 (17%) |
| A 1.2 | 12 (4.5%) |
| A 1.3 | 6 (2.3%) |
| A 2.1 | 56 (21.2%) |
| A 2.2 | 48 (18.2%) |
| A 2.3 | 20 (7.6%) |
| A 3.1 | 20 (7.6%) |
| A 3.2 | 18 (6.8%) |
| A 3.3 | 39 (14.8%) |
| Time from orthopedic consultation to operative room [hours] | Mean 25.4 (Range: 1–456) |
| Length of hospital stay [days] | Mean 8.2 (Range: 1–55) |
| Length of follow up [weeks] | Mean 37 (Range: 12–186) |
| Operative time from skin incision [min] | Mean 95.87 (Range: 20–429) |
| Estimated blood loss [mL] | Mean 196.12 (Range: 5–1200) |
| Immediate postoperative neck-shaft angle [degrees] | Mean 127.38 (Range: 115–144) |
| Tip-apex distance | Mean (Range: 5.1–29.48) |
Complications
| Mechanical hardware failure | |
|---|---|
| Screw cutout | 2 (0.75%) |
| Broken distal screws | 9 (3.4%) |
| Distal screw loosening | 8 (3.0%) |
| Loose lag screws | 2 (0.75%) |
| Delayed union | 2 (0.75%) |
| Postoperative medical complications | |
| Acute renal injury | 5 (1.9%) |
| Urinary tract infection | 13 (4.9%) |
| Respiratory distress | 5 (1.9%) |
| Deep vein thrombosis | 1 (0.38%) |
| Pulmonary embolism | 1 (0.38%) |
| Myocardial infarction | 1 (0.38%) |
| Postoperative surgical complications | |
| Superficial wound infection | 6 (2.3%) |
| Deep wound infection | 4 (1.5%) |
| Revision surgery | |
| Malrotation | 1 (0.38%) |
| Malunion | 1 (0.38%) |
| Symptomatic hardware removal | 3 (1.1%) |