| Literature DB >> 30761223 |
Brett Rocos1, Thomas Fleming1, Karen Harding2, Mehool Acharya2, Andrew Riddick2, Mike Kelly2.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of atypical femoral fractures in our local population, study their current outcomes and present a novel surgical strategy based on these data. Patients who received surgical fixation of an atypical pattern proximal femoral fracture over a four-year period were identified and followed up in the clinic until union, revision surgery or death. The local incidence of atypical femoral fractures is 1.1 per 1000 per annum amongst patients receiving bisphosphonates. Twelve fixation procedures were carried out in 10 patients. Intra-operative reduction and nailing led to an average deformity of 8.5° varus and 13° apex anterior. Five cases required revision surgery. Fifty percent of primary procedures resulted in radiographic union within two years. We suggest that the lateral side of the fracture should be considered a primary nonunion. We advocate undertaking a wedge excision to correct the bone to a valgus morphology and stabilising with an intramedullary nail and a lateral tension plate. Multicentre studies are needed to demonstrate the efficacy of any particular approach.Entities:
Keywords: blood transfusion; geriatrics; resuscitation; trauma
Year: 2018 PMID: 30761223 PMCID: PMC6364955 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.3670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
The demographics, clinical details and surgical results of patients with atypical proximal femoral fractures treated in our unit between March 1, 2009 and March 31, 2013.
| Case | Sex | Age | Fixation device | Duration of prodromal pain (weeks) | Position of final reduction | Time to medial union (days) | Time to lateral union (days) | Difference in time to union (days) | Revision procedure | Drug | Length of drug treatment | Co-morbidities |
| 1 | F | 64 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) | None recorded | Varus 13° | 332 | Nonunion | - | None | Alendronate | Unknown | Renal transplant, Type 2 diabetes |
| 2 | F | 67 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) | 4 | Varus 13° | 89 | Nonunion | - | None | Intravenous ibandronate, Alendronate Prednisolone | 3 years | Breast carcinoma, colitis, emphysema |
| 2 (2nd fracture) | F | 71 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) | None recorded | Varus 14° flexion 20° | 82 | 82 | 0 | None | Intravenous ibandronate, Alendronate Prednisolone | >5 years | Breast carcinoma, colitis, emphysema |
| 3 | F | 81 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) | None recorded | Varus 11° flexion 7° | 342 | 524 | 182 | None | Alendronate | Unknown | Ankylosing spondylitis, Osteoporosis |
| 4 | F | 73 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) | None recorded | Neutral | 117 | 236 | 119 | Revised at five days for iatrogenic fracture to plate and revision nailing | Alendronate Prednisolone | 4 years | Polymyalgia rheumatica |
| 5 | F | 64 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) | 2 | Varus 8° flexion 11° | none | Nonunion | - | Revision to blade plate at 14 months for nonunion. Fully united four months post revision | Alendronate | 1 month | Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, obstructive sleep apnoea |
| 5 (2nd fracture) | F | 66 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) & anterior plate | None recorded | Varus 4° | 181 | Nonunion | - | Revised at 10 months for broken nail | Alendronate | 2 years | Obesity, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, obstructive sleep apnoea, ischaemic heart disease |
| 6 | M | 66 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) & cable | 1 | Varus 10 ° | 76 | Nonunion | - | Revised at 15 months to blade plate for broken nail | Alendronate | 16 months | Rheumatoid arthritis |
| 7 | F | 79 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) | None recorded | Varus 3° | 66 | 192 | 126 | None | Alendronate | 4 years | Polymyalgia rheumatica |
| 8 | F | 74 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) | 26 | Varus 15° | 86 | 373 | 287 | None | Alendronate | 8 years | Osteoporosis |
| 9 | F | 67 | Gamma 3 (Stryker) | 3 | Varus 7° | none | Nonunion | - | Revised at four months to revision nail and lateral tension band plate for broken nail. Fully united at six Months | Alendronate | 5 years | Polymyalgia rheumatica |
| 10 | F | 75 | T2 recon nail (Stryker) | None recorded | Varus 4° | 76 | 361 | 285 | None | Alendronate | 6 months | Rheumatoid arthritis, lumbar stenosis, gout |
Figure 1Forces applied across an atypical fracture following traditional and novel fixation techniques
The red arrows indicate the direction of force applied by the body weight (w) and the resultant forces across the fracture caused by the fixation technique.
A) Cephalomedullary nail alone caused distraction at the lateral side of the fracture, increased if the natural varus is not corrected. B) With the addition of a lateral tension band plate, wedge excision of the lateral cortex and valgising reduction, compression is achieved across the entire fracture.