Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3241434 | Injury | 2009 | 8 Pages |
This was a prospective study of 43 consecutive cases of combined ipsilateral femoral neck and shaft fractures treated with cephalomedullary nails. Sequential clinicoradiological evaluation of all high-energy femoral shaft fractures to detect associated ipsilateral neck fracture improved diagnosis. All but 1 of 35 cases included in the study achieved union of both fractures and excellent or good functional outcome. Mean Harris Hip Score at the last follow-up was 92 ± 4 in single-neck screw configurations, and 94 ± 3 for two-neck screw cephalomedullary nails which had better tip–apex distance. Mean sliding of the neck screw was 5 ± 2 mm with single-neck and 3 ± 2 mm with two-neck screw constructs. In six cases shortening was <1 cm; 22 had delayed union of the shaft fracture, but only four of these needed additional surgery. Early aggressive fixation of both fractures using a cephalomedullary nail with the least possible surgical trauma is the key to success in these polytrauma cases.