| Literature DB >> 32828132 |
Pei Liu1, Dongxu Jin1, Changqing Zhang2, Youshui Gao3.
Abstract
Failed treatment of intertrochanteric (IT) femoral fractures leads to remarkable disability and pain, and revision surgery is frequently accompanied by higher complication and reoperation rates than primary internal fixation or primary hip arthroplasty. There is an urgent need to establish a profound strategy for the effective surgical management of these fragile patients. Salvage options are determined according to patient physiological age, functional level, life expectancy, nonunion anatomical site, fracture pattern, remaining bone quality, bone stock, and hip joint competency. In physiologically young patients, care should be taken to preserve the vitality of the femoral head with salvage internal fixation; however, for the elderly population, conversion arthroplasty can result in early weight bearing and ambulation and eliminates the risks of delayed fracture healing. Technical challenges include a difficult surgical exposure, removal of broken implants, deformity correction, critical bone defects, poor bone quality, high perioperative fracture risk, and prolonged immobilization. Overall, the salvage of failed internal fixations of IT fractures with properly selected implants and profound techniques can lead to the formulation of valuable surgical strategies and provide patients with satisfactory clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Failed fracture fixation; Hip fracture; Intertrochanteric femoral fracture; Revision surgery; Salvage internal fixation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32828132 PMCID: PMC7443291 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-020-03593-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1The strategy to treat failed osteosynthesis of intertrochanteric fractures is weighed between salvage osteosynthesis and conversion arthroplasty. The decision is multifactorial and should be individualized
Fig. 2Failed nailing of an intertrochanteric fracture in an active 78-year-old man. a The intertrochanteric fracture had been stabilized by an antegrade long γ nail and circumferential cerclage 4 years ago. The patient first experienced significant hip pain and restricted hip motion 1 month ago without trauma history. Radiography showed nonunion of the intertrochanteric fracture and breakage of the γ nail. b Transverse and c coronal sections of CT scans showed osteolysis of the great trochanter as well as coxa vara with obvious fracture gaps. d Prior implants were removed. The malalignment was corrected, causing a larger gap in the calcar. Sufficient bone grafting was used to fill the gap, and the fracture was stabilized by a reverse LISS for the distal femur
Fig. 3Failed plate osteosynthesis of an intertrochanteric fracture in a 77-year-old lady. a Obvious sclerosis, coxa vara, limb shortening, and screw pull-out was observed, indicating nonunion of the intertrochanteric fracture. Significant osteoporosis should be noted, as reflected by the thin femoral cortices. The patient’s painful limping was evident. b A cemented modular long-stem prosthesis was used to restore the limb length and facilitate enhanced recovery after the surgery
Technical challenges and strategies
| Challenge | Strategy | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Surgical exposure | Trochanteric sliding osteotomy | [ |
| Removal of previous fixation devices | Dislocating the hip joint before removing; excising the femoral head with the lag screw in situ | [ |
| Removal of broken screws | Trephines, grasping tools, a standard broken screw removal set and a metal-cutting high-speed burr | [ |
| Revision internal fixation | Avoiding a varus malreduction and obtaining stable fixation (compression technique and bone grafting) | [ |
| Bone deformity of proximal femur | Restoring the relationship between the tip of greater trochanter and the center of femoral head rotation | [ |
| Femoral canal preparation for revision arthroplasty | Endosteal sclerotic bone removal: gauge osteotome and/or a burr; refereing horizontal axis of the knee joint to adjust the anteversion of the stem; using C-arm image intensifier or fluoroscopic image intensifier to guide the placement of the stem | [ |
| Bone defect of proximal femur | Calcar-replacing and long-stem implant combined with or without a prophylactic cable; tumor-type endoprosthesis | [ |
| Leakage of cement through screw holes | Finger pressure, packed gauze, re-inserted screws, surgical glove inflated with saline, fashioned bone plug | [ |
| Acetabula preparation in patients with poor bone quality | Reaming acetabular cartilage judiciously; avoiding forceful component impaction; considering screws augmentation | [ |
| Greater trochanter reattachment | Contoured plating, tension band wiring and trochanter claw plate with wiring | [ |