Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3242475 | Injury | 2009 | 6 Pages |
AimIn order to assess the effect of osteoporosis on healing time, the files of 165 patients with femoral shaft fractures that were treated in our institution with locked-reamed intramedullary nailing were retrospectively reviewed.Patients and methodsPatients with open fractures, pathological fractures, revision surgery, severe brain injuries and prolonged ITU stay were excluded. In all patients the Singh-index score for osteoporosis and the canal bone ratio (CBR) were assigned. Sixty-six patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Patients were divided into two groups; group A (29 patients) consisted of patients over 65 years old with radiological evidence of osteoporosis and group B (37 patients) of patients between 18 and 40 years old with no signs of osteoporosis.ResultsIn all group A patients Singh score ≤4 and CBR > 0.50 were assigned, suggesting the presence of osteoporosis, whereas all group B patients were assigned with Singh score ≥5 and CBR < 0.48. Fractures of group A healed in 19.38 ± 5.9 weeks (12–30) and in group B 16.19 ± 5.07 weeks (10–28), P = 0.02.ConclusionsFracture healing of nailed femoral diaphyseal fractures is significantly delayed in older osteoporotic patients. Further studies are required to clarify the exact impact of osteoporosis in the whole healing process.