Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4289048 International Journal of Surgery Case Reports 2015 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Osteonecrosis of the femoral head should be included in the differential diagnosis of insufficiency fracture of the femoral neck.•Enhanced MRI may be useful in determining the existence of extensive osteonecrosis of the femoral head.

IntroductionAlthough the subchondral portion of the femoral head is a common site for collapse in osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH), femoral-neck fracture rarely occurs during the course of ONFH. We report a case of occult insufficiency fracture of the femoral neck without conditions predisposing to insufficiency fractures, occurring in association with ONFH.Presentation of caseWe report a case of occult fracture of the femoral neck due to extensive ONFH in a 60-year-old man. No abnormal findings suggestive of ONFH were identified on radiographs, and the fracture occurred spontaneously without any trauma or unusual increase in activity. The patient’s medical history, age, and good bone quality suggested ONFH as a possible underlying cause. Contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging was useful in determining whether the fracture was caused by ONFH or was instead a simple insufficiency fracture caused by steroid use.DiscussionThe patient was treated with bipolar hemiarthroplasty, but if we had not suspected ONFH as a predisposing condition, the undisplaced fracture might have been treated by osteosynthesis, and this would have led to nonunion or collapse of the femoral head. To avoid providing improper treatment, clinicians should consider ONFH as a predisposing factor in pathologic fractures of the femoral neck.ConclusionONFH should be included in the differential diagnosis of insufficiency fracture of the femoral neck.

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