1.Study on effectiveness of treating femoral neck fractures based on theory of "positive support".
Liu YANG ; Gang MO ; Lin XU ; Yang LI ; Shiqiang RUAN
Chinese Journal of Reparative and Reconstructive Surgery 2023;37(8):958-963
OBJECTIVE:
To explore effectiveness of positive support reduction and internal fixation in the treatment of femoral neck fractures.
METHODS:
A clinical data of 74 patients with femoral neck fractures treated with hollow screw internal fixation between September 2017 and September 2021 was retrospectively analyzed. Based on the quality of fracture reduction, they were divided into positive support reduction group (group A, n=25), negative support reduction group (group B, n=21), and anatomical reduction group (group C, n=28). There was no significant difference in baseline data such as gender, age, cause of injury, disease duration, fracture side, Garden classification, and fracture line position classification between groups (P>0.05). The occurrence of complications such as early fixation failure, femoral neck shortening, non-union of fractures, and femoral head necrosis in three groups, as well as the Harris score of the hip joint were recorded and compared.
RESULTS:
All patients had primary healing of incisions after operation and were followed up more than 12 months. The follow-up time for groups A, B, and C was (21.1±5.7), (22.6±4.3), and (21.9±4.1) months, respectively; there was no significant difference between groups (P>0.05). There was no significant difference in the incidences of non-union of fractures, early internal fixation failure, and the femoral head necrosis between groups (P>0.05). The incidence and length of femoral neck shortening, and the hip Harris score at last follow-up in groups A and C were all superior to those in the group B, with significant difference (P<0.05). There was no significant difference in the above indicators between groups A and C (P>0.05).
CONCLUSION
Positive support reduction can provide a good biomechanical environment for the healing of femoral neck fractures, thereby achieving a higher fracture healing rate, reducing the occurrence of femoral neck shortening, minimizing the function of hip joint, and achieving effectiveness similar to anatomical reduction.
Humans
;
Femur Head Necrosis
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Femoral Neck Fractures/surgery*
;
Femur Neck
;
Plastic Surgery Procedures
2.Assessment of the local blood supply when femoral neck fracture occurs:advances in the anatomy research and its clinical application.
Sheng-Hui WU ; Yu MIAO ; Xiao-Zhong ZHU ; Guang-Yi LI
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2023;36(3):294-298
The stability of internal fixation of femoral neck fractures can be obtained through surgical techniques, the configuration of screws and bone grafting, etc. However, the blood supply injury caused by fractures could not be completely reversed by the current medical management. Hence, the comprehensive evaluation of the residual blood supply of the femoral neck, to perioperatively avoid further iatrogenic injury, has become a hotspot. The anatomy of the extraosseous blood supply of the femoral neck has been widely reported, while its clinical application mostly involved the assessment of the medial circumflex femoral artery and retinacular arteries. However, further studies are needed to explore the prognosis of patients with these artery injuries, with different degrees, caused by femoral neck fractures. Direct observations of nutrient foramina in vivo are not possible with current clinical technologies, but it is possible to make reasonable preoperative planning to avoid subsequent femoral head necrosis based on the distribution features of nutrient foramina. The anatomy and clinical application studies of the intraosseous blood supply focused on the junction area of the femoral head and neck to probe the mechanism of femoral head necrosis. Thus, the intraosseous blood supply of other regions in the femoral neck remains to be further investigated. In addition, a blood supply evaluation system based on a three-level structure, extraosseous blood vessels, nutrient foramina, and intraosseous vascular network, could be explored to assist in the treatment of femoral neck fractures.
Humans
;
Femur Head Necrosis
;
Femoral Neck Fractures/surgery*
;
Femur Neck
;
Femur Head/surgery*
;
Femoral Artery
;
Fracture Fixation, Internal
3.Treatment of avascular necrosis of femoral head by impacting granular bone grafting via window in femoral neck.
Gui-Cheng LIANG ; Bin JIA ; Jian-Guo JI
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2010;23(9):704-707
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the clinical results of continuing skeletal traction and impaction granular bone grafting via window in femoral neck for the treatment of avascular necrosis of femoral head.
METHODSFrom August 2000 to October 2004, 23 patients (35 hips) with femoral head necrosis were treated by continuing skeletal traction and impacting granular bone grafting via bone window on femoral neck. There were 18 males, 5 females, with an average age of 32 years ranging from 19 to 52 years, which included 7 hips of stage II, 28 hips of stage III. All patients had various degrees of hip joint pain and suffered from limited hip motion. The necrotic bone, granulation tissue and hardening zone were completely cleaned via bone window on the femoral neck. The autogenous granular iliac bone was grafted, and impacted persistently. Skeletal traction through femur condyles was applied continually after the operations. The effects before and after operation were compared by the hip pain, function, joint activity and X-ray.
RESULTSRegular follow-up was carried out after the patients were dismissed from the hospital. The follow-up period was 6 months, 1 year, 2 years, 3 years, 4 years, 5 years respectively. According to Wang's standard, the average score was increased from (52.66 +/- 12.53) preoperatively to (88.94 +/- 5.84) preoperatively at half a year, (89.78 +/- 6.18) at 1 year, (86.37 +/- 7.46) at 2 years, (84.08 +/- 7.57) at 3 years, (83.76 +/- 8.08) at 4 years, and (76.83 +/- 8.98) at 5 years. Scores of operation were greatly increased and the difference had statistical significance.
CONCLUSIONContinuing skeletal traction after the operation, completely cleaning the necrotic bone and impacting granular bone grafting via window on femoral neck can greatly raise the satisfactory rate of clinical effect and delay the progression of disease for avascular necrosis of femoral head.
Adult ; Bone Transplantation ; methods ; Female ; Femur Head Necrosis ; physiopathology ; surgery ; Femur Neck ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged
4.Femoral head necrosis rate and risk factors after internal fixation of femoral neck fracture:a Meta-analysis.
Huan WANG ; Chun-Xia HAN ; Zi-Sheng AI
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2022;35(4):390-399
OBJECTIVE:
To study the incidence and risk factors of osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH) after internal fixation in adult patients with femoral neck fracture (FNF) after 2000, and identify high-risk population of ONFH.
METHODS:
PubMed, Medline, The Cochrane Library, CNKI, Wanfang and VIP Database were searched to collect all the literatures on ONFH and related risk factors after internal fixation of FNF from January 1th 2000 to July 1th 2020. Study extraction was performed according to inclusion and exclusion criteria. Endnote X9 and Excel 2019 were used for literatures extraction, management and data entry, and R Studio 3.6.5 software was used for Meta-analysis. Subgroup analysis, sensitivity analysis and publication bias detection were used to explore the sources of heterogeneity and the reliability of the evaluation results.
RESULTS:
A total of 16 studies with 5521 patients were included. Meta-analysis showed that the incidence of ONFH after internal fixation for adult FNF was 14.5% [95% CI(0.126-0.165)]. Fracture displacement[OR=0.27, 95%CI(0.21-0.35)] and reduction quality [OR=0.15, 95%CI(0.09-0.27)] were related risk factors for ONFH. The results of subgroup rate analysis showed that the non-displaced fracture necrosis rate was 6.2%[95%CI(0.051-0.077)] and the displaced fracture necrosis rate was 20.4% [95%CI(0.166-0.249)];the good reduction fracture necrosis rate was 8.3%[95%CI(0.072-0.095)] and the poor reduction fracture necrosis rate was 35.5%[95%CI(0.233-0.500)]. The included literatures have good consistency and no publication bias.
CONCLUSION
After 2000, the total incidence of ONFH after internal fixation of adult FNF has decreased, while the necrosis rates of patients with displaced fracture and poor reduction are still at a high level. The interval between injury and surgery was not analyzed in this study because of the inconstant division in the original literature.
Adult
;
Femoral Neck Fractures/complications*
;
Femur Head
;
Femur Head Necrosis/surgery*
;
Humans
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Risk Factors
5.Treatment of femoral neck fractures after the fixation of ipsilateral femoral shaft by antegrade intramedullary nail.
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2011;24(11):939-942
OBJECTIVETo investigate the treatment of femoral neck fractures after the fixation of ipsilateral femoral shaft fracture by antegrade intramedullary nail.
METHODSA retrospective study on 12 patients with femoral neck fractures after the fixation of ipsilateral femoral shaft fracture by antegrade intramedullary nail, which were identified intraoperatively or postoperatively from January 2000 to January 2010. All the patients were treated with 2 supplemental screws placed anteriorly and posteriorly to intramedullary nail seperately. All the patients were periodic followed-up, fractures union and functional recovery were evaluated.
RESULTSAll the patients were followed up, and the duration ranged from 10 to 36 months (averaged 16.5 months). The mean healing time was 3.6 months in femoral neck fractures and 5.4 months in femoral shaft fractures. No osteonecrosis of femoral head was found. According to Harris scoring system for hip function, 7 patients got an excellent result, 3 good, 2 fair.
CONCLUSIONTreatment of femoral neck after the fixation of ipsilateral femoral shaft by antegrade intramedullary nail with 2 screws placed anteriorly and posteriorly to intramedullary nail separately is feasible, and has the advantages of reliable fixation, less trauma and high rate of fracture healing.
Adult ; Female ; Femoral Neck Fractures ; surgery ; Femur ; surgery ; Fracture Fixation, Intramedullary ; methods ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged
6.Solitary osteochondroma in the femoral neck: a case report.
Jun LI ; Yun ZHOU ; Jue-Hua JING
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2014;27(2):165-166
Adult
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Bone Neoplasms
;
pathology
;
surgery
;
Femur Neck
;
pathology
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Osteochondroma
;
pathology
;
surgery
7.Pressure side and tension side comminution of femoral neck cortex are independent risk factors for aseptic necrosis after femoral neck fracture surgery.
Mang-Mang CHEN ; Yang-Xun LYU ; Sheng-Lei LIN ; Li-Peng HUANG ; Qi-Rong DONG
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2021;34(3):203-208
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the related factors of aseptic necrosis of femoral head after closed reduction and internal fixation of femoral neck fracture.
METHODS:
From January 2009 to January 2016, 236 patients with femoral neck fracture were treated with closed reduction and internal fixation with 3 hollow lag screws, including 111 males and 125 females, aged from 19 to 89 (50.17±12.88) years. According to the follow-up results, the correlation of aseptic necrosis of femoral head was analyzed. Univariate analysis of age, gender, injured side, body weight, injury mechanism, preoperative waiting time, Garden classification and whether there was comminution of femoral neck cortex was conducted to obtain the independent variables with significant difference. Then binary logistic regression analysis was conducted to explore the independent risk factors of avascular necrosis of femoral head.
RESULTS:
The average follow-up period of 236 cases was 4.58 years. There were significant differences in the range of injury (24.69% vs. 5.16%,
CONCLUSION
High energy injury, preoperative waiting time (>48 h) and comminution of femoral neck cortex were independent risk factors for aseptic necrosis of femoral head. In addition, cortical comminution on the pressure side and tension side of the femoral neck is a strong prognostic risk factor for aseptic necrosis of the femoral head, because it indicates a more serious and complex injury mechanism.
Aged
;
Female
;
Femoral Neck Fractures/surgery*
;
Femur Head Necrosis/surgery*
;
Femur Neck
;
Fracture Fixation, Internal/adverse effects*
;
Fractures, Comminuted
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Risk Factors
8.Anatomic data of the proximal femur and its clinical significance.
Jieyu LIANG ; Kanghua LI ; Qiande LIAO ; Guanghua LEI ; Yihe HU ; Yong ZHU ; Ailan HE
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2009;34(8):811-814
OBJECTIVE:
To measure the anatomic data of the proximal femur and to design an internal fixation instrument aiming at subtrochanteric fracture.
METHODS:
We measured the anatomic data of 56 pairs of the matching proximal femur specimens: the diameter of femoral head (HD), the axis length of femoral head (HAL), 135 degree femoral head-neck axis length (HNAL), 135 degree femoral head-neck axis upper length (HNAUL), 135 degree femoral head-neck axis underside length (HNADL), the anterior-posterior axis diameter of femoral neck (NAPD), the upper-underside diameter of femoral neck (NUUD), femoral neck-shaft angle (NFA), femoral shaft lateral cortex-greater trochanter angle (SLGA), the medial-lateral diameter of lesser trochanter level's femoral shaft (LSMLD), the anterior-posterior diameter of lesser trochanter level's femoral shaft (LSAPD), the medial-lateral diameter of 5 cm below lesser trochanter femoral shaft (5 cm MLD), and the anterior-posterior diameter of 5 cm below lesser trochanter femoral shaft (5 cm APD). Part of the data was analyzed and compared.
RESULTS:
HD was (46.69+/-3.73) mm, HAL was (39.22+/-4.17) mm, HNAL was (95.45+/-8.16) mm, HNAUL was (84.02+/-7.11) mm, HNADL was (99.95+/-9.34) mm, NAPD was (26.27+/-3.15) mm, NUUD was (32.24+/-3.31) mm, NFA was 126.21 degree+/-7.13 degree, SLGA was 16.38 degree+/-4.04 degree, LSMLD was (31.05+/-3.57) mm, LSAPD was (27.63+/-2.96) mm, 5 cm MLD was (26.36+/-3.22) mm, and 5 cm APD was (25.59+/-2.75) mm. NFA was positively correlated with SLGA (r=0.396, P=0.003).
CONCLUSION
It is necessary to design internal fixator to fit the anatomical feature of Chinese femur for the treatment of subtrochanteric fracture, and we should thoroughly consider the angle of the SLGA.
Anthropometry
;
Cadaver
;
Equipment Design
;
Femur Head
;
anatomy & histology
;
Femur Neck
;
anatomy & histology
;
Fracture Fixation, Internal
;
instrumentation
;
Hip Fractures
;
surgery
;
Humans
9.CT-based Navigation System Using a Patient-Specific Instrument for Femoral Component Positioning: An Experimental in vitro Study with a Sawbone Model.
Seongpung LEE ; Jun Young KIM ; Jaesung HONG ; Seung Hoon BAEK ; Shin Yoon KIM
Yonsei Medical Journal 2018;59(6):769-780
PURPOSE: The intraoperative version of the femoral component is usually determined by visual appraisal of the stem position relative to the distal femoral condylar axis. However, several studies have suggested that a surgeon's visual assessment of the stem position has a high probability of misinterpretation. We developed a computed tomography (CT)-based navigation system with a patient-specific instrument (PSI) capable of three-dimensional (3D) printing and investigated its accuracy and consistency in comparison to the conventional technique of visual assessment of the stem position. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A CT scan of a femur sawbone model was performed, and pre-experimental planning was completed. We conducted 30 femoral neck osteotomies using the conventional technique and another 30 femoral neck osteotomies using the proposed technique. The femoral medullary canals were identified in both groups using a box chisel. RESULTS: For the absolute deviation between the measured and planned values, the mean two-dimensional anteversions of the proposed and conventional techniques were 1.41° and 4.78°, while their mean 3D anteversions were 1.15° and 3.31°. The mean θ 1, θ 2, θ 3, and d, all of which are parameters for evaluating femoral neck osteotomy, were 2.93°, 1.96°, 5.29°, and 0.48 mm for the proposed technique and 4.26°, 3.17°, 4.43°, and 3.15 mm for the conventional technique, respectively. CONCLUSION: The CT-based navigation system with PSI was more accurate and consistent than the conventional technique for assessment of stem position. Therefore, it can be used to reduce the frequency of incorrect assessments of the stem position among surgeons and to help with accurate determination of stem anteversion.
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip
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Femur
;
Femur Neck
;
In Vitro Techniques*
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Osteotomy
;
Printing, Three-Dimensional
;
Surgeons
;
Surgery, Computer-Assisted
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed