| Literature DB >> 35093125 |
Dae Jin Nam1, Min Seok Kim1, Tae Ho Kim2, Min Woo Kim2, Suc Hyun Kweon3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: We evaluated the radiologic and clinical outcomes of a lateral incision single plate with and a single-incision double plating in elderly patients with osteoporotic distal femoral fractures.Entities:
Keywords: Distal femoral fracture; Double plating; Femur; Lateral parapatellar approach; Osteoporotic fracture
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35093125 PMCID: PMC8800239 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-022-02944-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Fig. 1A Lateral plates: locking compression plates (distal femur plates). The plates are available with 5, 7, 9, 11, and 13 holes for the lateral side of the left and right femurs (Depuy Synthes approved by the AO Foundation, Switzerland and United States). B Medial plates: TomoFix medial distal femoral plates, available for the medial side of the left and right femurs (Depuy Synthes approved by the AO Foundation, Switzerland and United States)
Fig. 2Lateral parapatellar surgical approach: the incision of the quadriceps tendon is extended toward the proximal part to sufficiently expose the fracture part in order to easily locate the medial and lateral metal plates. A Bone defect, B double plating, C skin incision line
Fig. 3A Preoperative radiograph of a 70-year-old female patient showing a displaced distal femoral fracture. B Postoperative radiograph of the 70-year-old female patient showing the displaced distal femoral fracture. C Bone union was achieved at 6 months after the operation with double-plate fixation
Fig. 4Measurement of aLDFA (A) and aPDFA (B)
Distribution of patient, age, gender, follow-up and BMI
| Variable | Single plate group | Double plate group |
|---|---|---|
Patients Age (years) | 42 77.3 (67–87) | 40 76.8 (64–86) |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 24 (57.1%) | 25 (62.5%) |
| Male | 18 (42.9%) | 15 (37.5%) |
| Follow up (months) | 14.7 (12–21) | 15.3 (12–26) |
| BMD T-score | − 3.0 (− 1.2 to − 4.8) | − 3.1 (− 0.6 to − 4.7) |
BMD. Bone mineral density
The fracture types of patients, from single-plate and double-plate group
| Variable | Single plate group | Double plate group |
|---|---|---|
| Fracture type (AO/OTA) | ||
| A1/A2/A3 | 0/0/0 | 0/0/18 |
| B1/B2/B3 | 0/10/1 | 0/0/0 |
| C1/C2/C3 | 9/19/3 | 3/12/7 |
AO/OTA. The AO Foundation/Orthopedic Trauma Association
The operation time, intraoperative bleeding, transfusion, bone union period, modified RUST score from single-plate and double-plate group
| Single plate group | Double plate group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Operation time (minutes) | 81 (66–92) | 110 (95–120) | 0.33 |
| Intraoperative bleeding (ml) | 467 (338–581) | 573 (381–657) | 0.29 |
| Transfusion (unit) | 0.81 (0–3) | 1.12 (0–3) | 0.47 |
| Union time (weeks) | 14.0 (8–19) | 12.2 (9–19) | 0.63 |
| Modified RUST score (points) | 9.8 (6–14) | 10.4 (7–14) | 0.38 |
RUST. radiographic union scale for tibia
Clinical and radiologic results and complications from single-plate and double-plate group
| Single plate group | Double plate group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Last follow up knee ROM | |||
| Flexion contracture | 5° (2°–10°) | 4° (2°–6°) | |
| Further flexion | 127° (95°–135°) | 131° (94°–136°) | |
| ROM (FF-FC) | 105° (90°–125°) | 110.7° (90°–130°) | 0.37 |
| aLDFA | 84.7° (81.7°–88.2°) | 83.2° (81.3°–86.4°) | 0.24 |
| aPDFA | 85.3° (81.5°–89.8°) | 84.4° (82.6°–87.7°) | 0.47 |
| Lysholm knee score | 63.62 (50–72) | 67.1 (57–75) | 0.44 |
| Knee society score | 84.2 (71–94) | 82.9 (68–96) | 0.53 |
| Complications (total) | 9 (21.4%) | 3 (7.5%) | |
| Non-union | 0 | 1 (2.5%) | |
| Metal failure | 1 (2.4%) | 0 | |
| Wound infection | 8 (19%) | 2 (5%) | |
ROM. Range of motion; FF-FC, further flexion-flexion contracture; aLDFA, anatomic lateral distal femoral angle; aPDFA, anatomic posterior distal femoral angle