| Literature DB >> 31396425 |
Shuya Tanaka1, Tomoaki Fukui1, Keisuke Oe1, Tomoyuki Matsumoto1, Takehiko Matsushita1, Shinya Hayashi1, Teruya Kawamoto1, Ryosuke Kuroda1, Takahiro Niikura1.
Abstract
Although the definition of atypical femoral fracture (AFF) excludes periprosthetic femoral fracture (PFF), the number of reports about PFF with characteristics of AFF is increasing. We present the case of such a fracture in this report. An 87-year-old woman who underwent bipolar hip arthroplasty for a femoral neck fracture 38 months prior reported left thigh pain with no history of trauma. Radiographs showed a simple transverse fracture at the level of the stem distal end with features of AFF: periosteal thickening of the lateral cortex, a medial spike, and a noncomminuted fracture. She presented other features resembling AFF: history of bisphosphonate use, prodromal symptoms, no associated trauma, and lateral bowing of the contralateral femur. The fracture showed nonunion after the initial osteosynthesis, and a revision surgery of the arthroplasty and osteosynthesis was performed. Nine months after the surgery, bony union was achieved and she regained the ability to walk. It is supposed that the fracture was influenced by a stress force related to implants and lateral bowing concentrating on the fracture site as a mechanical factor in addition to bisphosphonates as a biological factor. It would be important to recognize that AFF could occur at the peri-implant location, and early detection and treatment are essential.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31396425 PMCID: PMC6664512 DOI: 10.1155/2019/1275369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Orthop ISSN: 2090-6757
Figure 1Radiograph of the initial left femoral neck fracture.
Figure 2Radiograph just after bipolar hip arthroplasty.
Figure 3Radiograph shows a periprosthetic femoral fracture. A transverse fracture line around the stem tip progresses across the femur.
Figure 4Radiograph just after osteosynthesis with a locking plate on the lateral side of the femur.
Figure 5Radiograph 2 months before the periprosthetic fracture shows localized periosteal thickening of the lateral cortex at stem tip level.
Figure 6Radiograph 9 months after the osteosynthesis showing nonunion at the site of the fracture.
Figure 7Radiograph of the right (contralateral) femur. Femoral bowing was measured as the angulation between the proximal and distal quarters of the femoral diaphysis. It was 13 degrees in this case.
Figure 8Radiograph just after a revision surgery with a longer stem with a cemented technique and a locking plate on the lateral side of the distal femur.
Figure 9Radiograph 2 years after the revision surgery showing bone union achieved.
The cases of periprosthetic fractures resembling AFF described in the literature. Bisphosphonates were used before the fracture in all cases.
| Age | Sex | Surgery | Complication | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sayed-Noor AS, 2009 | 78 | F | Locking plate | No |
| Curtin BM, 2011 | 52 | F | No | No |
| Curtin BM. 2011 | 85 | F | No | No |
| Curtin BM, 2011 | 79 | F | No | No |
| Cross MB, 2012 | 81 | F | No | No |
| Chen F, 2012 | 81 | F | Locking plate | No |
| Schaeffer JF, 2012 | 79 | F | Longer stem revision | No |
| Reb CW, 2013 | 74 | F | Longer stem revision | No |
| Bhattacharyya R, 2014 | 72 | F | No | No |
| Niikura T, 2015 | 69 | F | Locking plate | No |
| Lee KJ, 2015 | 43 | F | Locking plate | Breakage of plate⇒adding another plate |
| Lee KJ, 2015 | 74 | F | Locking plate | No |
| Lee KJ, 2015 | 86 | F | Locking plate | No |
| Wakayama T, 2015 | 68 | F | Locking plate | No |
| Woo SB, 2016 | 82 | F | Locking plate | Breakage of plate |
| Bottai V, 2017 | 77 | F | Locking plate | Breakage of plate |