Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4051091 Clinical Biomechanics 2008 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundIntramedullary nailing has become a standard treatment for adult tibial shaft fractures. Retained intramedullary nails have been associated with stress shielding, although their long-term effect on decreasing tibial bone mineral density is currently unclear. The purpose of this study was to determine if retained tibial intramedullary nails decrease tibial mineral density in patients with successfully treated fractures.MethodsPatients treated with statically locked intramedullary nails for isolated, unilateral tibia shaft fractures were studied. Inclusion required that fracture had healed radiographically and that the patient returned to the pre-injury activity level. Data on patient demographic, fracture type, surgical technique, implant, and post-operative functional status were tabulated. Dual energy X-ray absorptiometry was used to measure bone mineral density in selected regions of the affected tibia and the contralateral intact tibia. Image reconstruction software was employed to ensure symmetry of the studied regions.FindingsTwenty patients (mean age 43; range 22–77 years) were studied at a mean of 29 months (range 5–60 months) following intramedullary nailing. There was statistically significant reduction of mean bone mineral density in tibiae with retained intramedullary nails (1.02 g/cm2 versus 1.06 g/cm2; P = 0.04). A significantly greater decrease in bone mineral density was detected in the reamed versus nonreamed tibiae (–7% versus +6%, respectively; P < 0.05).InterpretationThe present study demonstrates a small, but statistically significant overall bone mineral density decrease in healed tibiae with retained nails. Intramedullary reaming appears to be a factor potentiating the reduction of tibia bone mineral density in long-term nail retention.

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