| Literature DB >> 31295706 |
Kiyokazu Fukui1, Ayumi Kaneuji2, Hiroaki Hirata2, Jun-Ichi Tsujioka2, Akihiro Shioya3, Sohsuke Yamada3, Norio Kawahara2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Bilateral stress fracture of the femoral neck is very rarely seen in healthy young patients who are neither athletes nor military recruits. PRESENTATION OF CASE: The present report describes a 51-year-old male patient, not an athlete and with no previous history of disease, who developed bilateral stress fracture of the femoral neck without displacement. DISCUSSION: Simultaneous bilateral femoral neck fracture is a rare injury. In the present case, two factors predisposed to bilateral occult fracture of the femoral neck. The first was osteoporosis due to the patient's smoking and alcohol abuse. The second was vitamin D deficiency osteomalacia associated with inadequate sun exposure.Entities:
Keywords: Femoral neck fracture; Occult fracture; Osteomalacia; Osteoporosis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31295706 PMCID: PMC6616359 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijscr.2019.06.058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2210-2612
Fig. 1(A) Initial anteroposterior radiograph shows no significant findings except for mild pistol grip deformity on right hip and (B,C) small head-neck offset compared with left hip.
Fig. 2(A,B) Computed tomography axial planes indicate normal femoral neck anteversion on both hips, (C) multiplanar reconstruction shows herniation pit at lateral femoral head-neck junction on the right hip. (D) Bone scintigraphy scanning shows increased uptake in both femoral necks.
Fig. 3(A) T1 weighted MRI showing macroscopic fracture (white arrows). Fracture measures ≥50% of femoral neck width in coronal plane on right hip and <50% of femoral neck width in coronal plane on left hip. (B) MRI on short τ inversion recovery (STIR) sequence showing clear bone marrow edema in right femoral neck and slight bone marrow edema in left femoral neck.
Fig. 4(A–C) Postoperative radiographs obtained immediate after bilateral internal fixation with cannulated screw. (D) Arthroscopic observation on the right hip showing cleavage at labro-cartilage junction and acetabular cartilage delamination (black arrow). AL: acetabular labrum, FH: femoral head (E) Photomicrograph obtained from bone marrow of right iliac crest. Thin bone trabeculae noted. (Hematoxylin and eosin stain) (F) Undecalcified bone section. Increase in unmineralized osteoid (pink stain) compared with mineralized bone (bluish-green stain). (Villanueva-Goldner stain).