| Literature DB >> 33269124 |
Divesh Jalan1, Khushwant Singh Rathore2, Abhay Elhence3, Sandeep Kumar Yadav4, Deepak Kumar Maley5.
Abstract
Stress fractures of femoral neck are rare injuries and are usually seen in military recruits, marathon runners, and elderly with osteoporosis, renal rickets, steroid abuse, and metabolic bone diseases. Bilateral involvement of femoral neck in a healthy, non-athletic young adult is an extremely rare entity. We report one such case of a 36-year-old male who presented with bilateral groin pain for last three months. He had a history of excessive running prior to the onset of pain. The investigations confirmed bilateral stress fracture of the femoral neck, and the patient was operated with dynamic hip screw (DHS) on both sides. He returned to his routine activities in six months and at latest follow-up after two years; he is asymptomatic and has full function at both hips. This report highlights a rare cause of bilateral groin pain in a young adult, which requires early diagnosis and treatment to prevent complications.Entities:
Keywords: dynamic hip screw; neck of femur; stress fracture
Year: 2020 PMID: 33269124 PMCID: PMC7704018 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.11193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1X-ray of the pelvis with both hips showing displaced basicervical fracture of left neck of femur.
Figure 2MRI showing displaced basicervical neck of femur fracture on the left side and incomplete neck of femur fracture on the right side.
MRI: Magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 3Immediate post-operative x-ray showing internal fixation using dynamic hip screw on both sides.
Figure 4Radiograph at two years showing well united fractures without any complications.
Figure 5Clinical photograph demonstrating full function at both hip joints.
Review of existing literature about FNSFs.
FNSF, Femoral neck stress fractures; THR, total hip replacement; DHS, dynamic hip screw.
| Authors | Study type | Age and occupation | FNSF type | Treatment | Result |
| de Oliviera et al. [ | Case Report | 43 years, non-athlete, occupation not specified | Bilateral compression type, undisplaced | Bilateral osteosynthesis with two cannulated screws | Long-term follow-up not specified |
| Mahajan et al. [ | Case Report | 14 years athlete | Right complete with sclerosis over tension side, left side compression type | Conservative | Symptom-free at three months, long-term not specified |
| Bailie and Lamprecht [ | Case Report | 15 years athlete | Bilateral compression type | Conservative | Followed for last two years, no issues, full return to athletics in one year |
| Xiaozuo et al. [ | Case Report | 59 years, occupation not specified | Right side compression type, left side displaced | Right conservative, left THR | Right side non-union, symptom-free in one year |
| Naik et al. [ | Case series of seven fractures | 38-48 years, manual laborers | Compression type - 3, displaced - 3, tension type - 1 | Bilateral fixation | Good outcome at long-term |
| Naranje et al. [ | Case Report | 43 years, military recruit | Right compression type, left displaced | Bilateral osteosynthesis with cannulated screws | Asymptomatic and active at one-year follow-up |
| Kanwat et al. [ | Case Report | 50-year-old housewife | Right - undisplaced, left - displaced | Right - cannulated screws, left - THR | Asymptomatic at one year |
| Our study | Case Report | 36 years, non-athlete | Bilateral compression type | Bilateral DHS | Full weight-bearing at three months, asymptomatic at two years |