Objective To estimate clinical effect ofspin iliac deep vascular pedicled periosteum flap in repairing traumatic femoral neck of theca inside fracture in young and middleaged. Methods From April 1993 to September 2001, 12 cases of traumatic femoral neck fracture were given diaplastic operation with fixation of 3 centre hollow pressed bolt and were conducted under os traction bed and "C" arm X-ray machine. Spin iliac deep vascular pedicled periosteum flap wasstripped off, and transferred to the front of femoral neck fundus,then transplanted to the narrow inside of fracture through outer open door of articular capsule.Results All patients were followed up for 17 years. All fracture healedwithout femoral head necrosis, but mild arthritis appeared in 7 cases.Conclusion Vascular pedicled periosteum flap transfer of young and middle-aged femoral neck fracture, by decompression of femoral neck and reconstruction of blood circulation, can promote the fracture healing and decrease the wound and blood circulation destroy.
ObjectiveTo investigate the clinical e cacy of hip arthroplasty in treating intracapsular femoral neck fracture in elderly patients. MethodsFrom January 2010 to December 2012, 198 patients with intracapsular femoral neck fractures (Garden Ⅲ and Ⅳ ), aged between 65 and 85 years old were selected to be treated with hip arthroplasty. Clinical evaluation including Harris hip score, Barthel index, postoperative complications and activities of daily living were performed. ResultsThe patients were followed up for an average time of 15.6 months. At the follow-up time of 12 months, the Harris scores were 85-98, averaging 94.5; the Barthel indexes were 86-97, averaging 94.0. The main postoperative complications were subcutaneous fat necrosis (3 cases), deep venous thrombosis of lower limbs (2 cases), bedsores (2 cases), pulmonary infection (4 cases), dislocation (2 cases) and pain (4 cases). More than 95% of the patients had a satisfactory treatment and recovered activities of daily living. ConclusionHip arthroplasty reduces postoperative complications caused by prolonged bed rest and helps the patients get back to normal activities of daily living early, so it is an effective method to treat intracapsular femoral neck fractures and is suitable for widespread clinical application.
Objective To design a new type of three-dimensional honeycomb guide for percutaneous cannulated screw placement in femoral neck fracture and evaluate its effectiveness. Methods The clinical data of 40 patients with femoral neck fracture who met the selection criteria between June 2019 and December 2020 were retrospectively analyzed. According to different intraoperative positioning methods, they were divided into control group (20 cases, free hand positioning screws) and study group (20 cases, new guide assisted positioning screws). There was no significant difference in gender, age, side, cause of injury, Garden classification, and time from injury to operation between the two groups (P>0.05). The operation time, fluoroscopy times, guide needle puncture times, and fracture healing time of the two groups were recorded. The hip function was evaluated by Harris score at last follow-up. At immediate after operation, the following imaging indexes were used to evaluate the accuracy of screw implantation distribution: screw spacing, screw coverage area, distance from screw to cervical cortex, parallelism between screws, and screw to cervical axial deviation. Results All operations were successfully completed, and the guide needle did not penetrate the femoral neck cortex. There was no significant difference in operation time and fluoroscopy times between the two groups (P>0.05); the guide needle puncture times in the study group was significantly less than that in the control group (t=8.209, P=0.000). Imaging detection at immediate after operation showed that the screw spacing and screw coverage area in the study group were significantly greater than those in the control group (P<0.05); the distance from screw to cervical cortex, parallelism between screws, and screw to cervical axial deviation were significantly smaller than those in the control group (P<0.05). All patients were followed up 7-25 months, with an average of 19.3 months. There was no significant difference in follow-up time between the two groups (t=−0.349, P=0.729). There were 2 cases of fracture nonunion in the control group and 1 case in the study group, and the other fractures completely healed. One case of osteonecrosis of the femoral head occurred in the control group. During the follow-up, there was no complication such as vascular and nerve injury, venous thrombosis, screw penetration, withdrawal, breakage, and refracture, etc. There was no significant difference in fracture healing time and Harris score at last follow-up between the two groups (P>0.05). ConclusionThe new three-dimensional honeycomb guide has the advantages of simple structure and convenient use. It can reduce the puncture times of the guide needle and effectively improve the accuracy distribution of cannulated screw implantation.
ObjectiveTo investigate the short- and medium-term effectiveness of percutaneous compression plate (PCCP) internal fixation for femoral neck fractures in the elderly.MethodsThe clinical data of 32 elderly patients with femoral neck fracture treated with PCCP internal fixation between January 2012 and January 2019 were retrospectively analyzed. All of them were traumatic fractures. The causes of injury were falling in 20 cases, traffic accident in 7 cases, and falling from height in 5 cases. According to Garden classification, there were 7 cases of type Ⅱ, 15 cases of type Ⅲ, and 10 cases of type Ⅳ; there were 12 cases with Singh index level Ⅳ, 14 cases with level Ⅴ, and 6 cases with level Ⅵ; the bone mineral density of femoral neck was 0.610-0.860 g/cm2 (mean, 0.713 g/cm2). The time from injury to operation was 3-14 days, with an average of 5.8 days. Patients began to weight-bear gradually within 3 days postoperatively. The operation time, intraoperative blood loss, hospitalization stay, fracture reduction (Garden alignment index), fracture healing, failure of internal fixation, femoral neck shortening, and osteonecrosis of the femoral head were observed; hip function recovery was evaluated by Harris score.ResultsThe operation time was 35-135 minutes (mean, 73.4 minutes), the intraoperative blood loss was 75-385 mL (mean, 116.4 mL), the hospitalization stay was 3-15 days (mean, 8.3 days). At 1 week after operation, the Garden alignment index of fracture reduction was grade Ⅰ in 25 cases, grade Ⅱ in 6 cases, and grade Ⅲ in 1 case. One case of superficial infection of the incision occurred after operation, and no early complications such as deep vein thrombosis in the lower extremities, pulmonary embolism, or bedsores occurred. All the patients were followed up 2.1-4.0 years, with an average of 2.7 years. Except for 2 cases of delayed union (displaced trans-neck and subhead fractures), no nonunion of fracture and failure of internal fixation occurred, the fracture healing time was 4-8 months, with an average of 4.9 months. Femoral neck shortening occurred in 12 cases (37.5%); osteonecrosis of the femoral head occurred in 3 cases (9.4%), all of which were displaced trans-neck and subhead fractures, of which 2 cases received total hip arthroplasty and the other received conservative treatment. The Harris scores of the hip joint at 3 months, 2 years after operation and at last follow-up were significantly improved when compared with those before operation (P<0.05); there was no significant difference between each time point after operation (P>0.05). At last follow-up, the hip joint function was evaluated according to Harris score, the results were excellent in 15 cases, good in 12 cases, and fair in 5 cases, with an excellent and good rate of 84.4%. There was no significant difference in postoperative hip function composition among patients with different ages, Garden classification, Singh index, and Garden alignment index (P>0.05).ConclusionFor elderly patients with femoral neck fractures without severe osteoporosis and with relatively good physical conditions, PCCP internal fixation can achieve satisfactory short- and medium-term effectiveness, but there is a certain risk of osteonecrosis of the femoral head.
Objective To compare the efficacy and safety of dynamic hip screw (DHS) + anti-rotation screw and cannulated screw alone for femoral neck fracture in adults. Methods PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, SinoMed, Wanfang, and Chongqing VIP database were searched for the literature related to the comparison between DHS + anti-rotation screw and cannulated screw alone for femoral neck fracture in adults from the establishment of databases to 2022. RevMan 5.3 software was used for meta-analysis. Results Finally, 25 clinical studies were included, including 8 randomized controlled trials and 17 observational studies, 5 in English and 20 in Chinese. There were a total of 2099 patients, including 989 in the DHS + anti-rotation screw group and 1110 in the cannulated screw group. The meta-analysis results showed that the incidence of bone nonunion [odds ratio (OR)=0.29, 95% confidence interval (CI) (0.17, 0.48)], incidence of femoral head necrosis [OR=0.48, 95% CI (0.27, 0.88)], failure rate of internal fixation [OR=0.28, 95% CI (0.15, 0.51)] in the DHS + anti-rotation screw group were lower than those in the cannulated screw group (P<0.05). The surgical duration [mean difference (MD)=9.91, 95% CI (6.78, 13.05)], incision length [MD=1.25, 95% CI (0.15, 2.35)], and Harris score [MD=6.77, 95% CI (4.66, 8.88)] in the DHS + anti-rotation screw group were higher than those in the cannulated screw group (P<0.05). There was no statistically significant difference in intraoperative bleeding volume, Visual Analogue Scale score, hospital stay, and fracture healing time between the two groups (P>0.05). The incidence of bone nonunion in the DHS + anti-rotation screw group after Pauwels type Ⅲ fracture [OR=0.16, 95% CI (0.05, 0.50)] was lower than that in the cannulated screw group (P<0.05), and there was no statistically significant difference in the incidence of femoral head necrosis between the two groups (P>0.05). Conclusions For femoral neck fracture in adults, DHS + anti-rotation screw can reduce the incidence of bone nonunion, femoral head necrosis, and internal fixation failure compared with cannulated screw alone, and has a higher Harris score, but the surgical duration and incision are longer. Overall, DHS + anti-rotation screw are better at reducing the incidence of complications than cannulated screws alone.
Objective To analyze the correlation between postoperative complications and combined deflection angle classification adduction type (CDAC-ADT) of femoral neck fractures after cannulated screw internal fixation. MethodsThe clinical data of 121 patients with CDAC-ADT femoral neck fracture admitted between January 2018 and December 2021 and met the selected criteria were retrospectively analyzed. There were 69 males and 52 females, the age ranged from 19 to 79 years (mean, 48.1 years). The causes of injury included 52 cases of traffic accident, 24 cases of falling from height, and 45 cases of fall. The time from injury to operation ranged from 2 to 12 days, with an average of 6.0 days. Among them, there were 18 cases of CDAC-ADT type Ⅰ, 46 cases of type Ⅱ, and 57 cases of type Ⅲ; 6 cases of Garden type Ⅱ, 103 cases of type Ⅲ, and 12 cases of type Ⅳ; and according to the location of the fracture line, there were 26 cases of subcapitate type, 88 cases of transcervical type, and 7 cases of basal type. All patients were treated with cannulated screw internal fixation. The occurrence of complications (including internal fixation failure, fracture nonunion, and osteonecrosis of the femoral head) was recorded, and the correlation between complications and CDAC-ADT typing, Garden typing, and fracture line location were analyzed. Results The patients were followed up 8-44 months, with a mean of 24.9 months. There were 10 cases of internal fixation failure, 7 cases of fracture nonunion, and 30 cases of osteonecrosis of the femoral head after operation. Correlation analysis showed that patients’ CDAC-ADT typing was significantly correlated with the overall incidence of complication and the incidence of internal fixation failure, fracture nonunion, and osteonecrosis of the femoral head (P<0.05), and the Pearson coefficient of contingency were 0.435, 0.251, 0.254, and 0.241, respectively. Garden typing did not correlate with the overall incidence of complication and the incidence of internal fixation failure and fracture nonunion (P>0.05), but correlated with the incidence of osteonecrosis of the femoral head (P<0.05), and the Pearson coefficient of contingency was 0.251. Fracture line position typing had no correlation with the overall incidence of complication and the incidence of internal fixation failure, fracture nonunion, and osteonecrosis of the femoral head (P>0.05). Conclusion CDAC-ADT typing has obvious correlation with postoperative complications of femoral neck fracture and can be used to predict complications of femoral neck fracture.
ObjectiveTo summarize the patterns and research progress of the concomitant ipsilateral fractures of intracapsular femoral neck and extracapsular trochanter, and to provide a common language among orthopedic surgeons for scientific exchange.MethodsAccording to related literature and authors own experiences concerning the anatomic border between femoral neck and trochanter region, the intertrochanteric line (or intertrochanteric belt) and its capsularligament attachment footprint, fracture patterns, and treatment strategies were reviewed and analyzed.ResultsWith the rapid growing of geriatric hip fractures, an increased incidence was noted in recent years regarding the proximal femoral comminuted fractures that involving ipsilateral intracapsular neck and extracapsular trochanter regions simultaneously. But the concept of femoral neck combined with trochanter fractures was ambiguous. Based on the anatomic type of femoral neck fracture, the location of fracture center, and the ability to achieve direct inferior calcar or anteromedial cortex-to-cortex apposition and buttress, we classified these complex fractures into 3 sub-types: ① Segmental femoral neck fractures (two separate fracture centers at subcapital and trochanteric region respectively); ② Femoral neck fracture (trans-cervical) with extension to the supero-lateral trochanteric region (fracture center in femoral neck); ③ Trochanteric fracture with extension to the medio-inferior femoral neck region (fracture center in trochanter, comminuted basicervical fracture, or variant type of comminuted trochanter fracture). For treatment strategy, surgeons should consider the unique characteristics of femoral neck and trochanter, usually with combined fixation techniques, or arthroplasty supplemented with fixation.ConclusionCurrently there is no consensus on diagnosis and terminology regarding the concomitant ipsilateral fractures of femoral neck and trochanter. Further studies are needed.
Objective To evaluate the effectiveness of unstable femoral neck fracture with posteromedial comminutations treated by cannulated screws and medial bracing plate combined with bone allograft. MethodsThe clinical data of 18 patients with unstable femoral neck fracture with posteromedial comminutations treated by cannulated screws and medial bracing plate combined with bone allograft between July 2016 and March 2020 were retrospectively analyzed. The age ranged from 22 to 64 years, with a median age of 43 years. The causes of injury included 11 cases of falling injury, 3 cases of traffic accident injury, and 4 cases of fall from height injury. According to Garden classification, the femoral neck fracture was classified as type Ⅲ in 3 cases, type Ⅳ in 15 cases, and all patients were type Ⅲ according to Pauwels classification. The time from injury to operation was 1-5 days, with an average of 2.3 days. The fracture healing time and complications were recorded. The quality of fracture reduction was evaluated by Garden index immediately after operation; at last follow-up, the degree of femoral neck shortening was determined by Zlowodzki method, Harris score was used to evaluate hip function. Results The operation time was 62-98 minutes (mean, 75 minutes); intraoperative blood loss was 101-220 mL (mean, 153 mL). Cannulated screws guide wire was inserted 3-5 times (mean, 4 times). Intraoperative fluoroscopy was performed 9-21 times (mean, 15 times). The hospital stay was 5-11 days (mean, 7.2 days). All the patients were followed up 12-40 months with an average of 17.3 months. There was no postoperative complication such as accumulated pneumonia, lower extremity deep venous thrombosis, nail cutting, nail withdrawal, internal fixation fracture, and so on. There was no fracture nonunion and osteonecrosis of the femoral head during the follow-up; the fracture healing time was 7-15 weeks, with an average of 12.1 weeks. The quality of fracture reduction was evaluated immediately after operation, the results were grade Ⅰ in 15 cases and grade Ⅱ in 3 cases. At last follow-up, there were 2 cases with femoral neck shortening less than 5 mm and 1 case with 5-10 mm. The incidence of femoral neck shortening was 16.7%. The Harris score of hip joint was 73-97, with an average of 93.5; among them, 12 cases were rated as excellent, 3 cases as good, and 3 cases as fair, with an excellent and good rate of 83.3%. ConclusionFor the treatment of unstable femoral neck fracture with posteromedial comminutations, cannulated screws and medial bracing plate combined with bone allograft are dramatically effective due to earlier weight bearing, faster fracture healing, and better hip function recovery.
Objective To evaluate the correlation between pelvic incidence (PI) angle, hip deflection angle (HDA), combined deflection angle (CDA) and osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH) after femoral neck fracture, in order to explore early predictive indicators for ONFH occurrence after femoral neck fracture. Methods A study was conducted on patients with femoral neck fractures who underwent cannulated screw internal fixation between December 2018 and December 2020. Among them, 208 patients met the selection criteria and were included in the study. According to the occurrence of ONFH, the patients were allocated into ONFH group and non-NOFH group. PI, HDA, and CDA were measured based on the anteroposterior X-ray films of pelvis and axial X-ray films of the affected hip joint before operation, and the differences between the two groups were compared. The receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC) was used to evaluate the value of the above imaging indicators in predicting the occurrence of ONFH. ResultsAmong the 208 patients included in the study, 84 patients experienced ONFH during follow-up (ONFH group) and 124 patients did not experience ONFH (non-ONFH group). In the non-ONFH group, there were 59 males and 65 females, the age was 18-86 years (mean, 53.9 years), and the follow-up time was 18-50 months (mean, 33.2 months). In the ONFH group, there were 37 males and 47 females, the age was 18-76 years (mean, 51.6 years), and the follow-up time was 8-45 months (mean, 22.1 months). The PI, HDA, and CDA were significantly larger in the ONFH group than in the non-ONFH group (P<0.05). ROC curve analysis showed that the critical value of PI was 19.82° (sensitivity of 40.5%, specificity of 86.3%, P<0.05); the critical value of HDA was 20.94° (sensitivity of 77.4%, specificity of 75.8%, P<0.05); and the critical value of CDA was 39.16° (sensitivity of 89.3%, specificity of 83.1%, P<0.05). Conclusion There is a correlation between PI, HDA, CDA and the occurrence of ONFH after femoral neck fracture, in which CDA can be used as an important reference indicator. Patients with CDA≥39.16° have a higher risk of ONFH after femoral neck fracture.
Objective To study the application and the curative effect of compressed screw and sartorius bone flap in treating femoral neck fractures in youth or middle age. Methods From February 1996 to December 2004, 86 patients with femoral neck fracture were treated by open reduction compressed screw and sartorius bone flap, aging from 21 to 49 years. Fracture was caused by traffic accident in 35 cases, fall from height in 27 cases and fall in 24 cases. Accoding to Garden classification, 23 cases were type Ⅱ, 25 cases were type Ⅲ, and 15 cases were type Ⅳ. We analyzed fracture healing and evaluate function by observation of the postoperative X-ray films. Results Of the 86 patients, 62 were followed up 6 months to 7 years (2 years and 5 months on average). According to Weijie’s criterion for nonunion and necrosis offemoral head, nonunion occurred in 4 cases; the healing rate of fracture was 93.5%. In healed patients, necrosis of femoral head occurred in 7 cases (11.3%) after 3 years. The results of hip joint function evaluation were excellent in 44 cases, good in 8 cases, fair in 6 cases and poor in 4 cases; and the excellent and good rate was 83.9%. Conclusion Compressed screw and sartorius bone flap was simple and effective for femoral neck fractures in youth or middle age.