Principles
- Treatment choices are based on the patient’s age, mobility, independence, bone stock & the fracture configuration & classification
Classification
Garden’s Classification
- Intracapsular fractures classified on Garden’s system
- AP hip XR.
- Normal angle between primary compressive trabeculae of the neck & the longitudinal axis of the shaft is normally 160°
Type | Description |
---|---|
1 | greater than 160° |
2 | equals 160° |
3 | less than 160° |
4 | equals 160° but trabeculae of head & neck fragments are parallel, not continuous i.e. overlapped |
- Treatment of 1=2 & 3=4 therefore could classify as displaced / undisplaced
Pauwel’s classification
- not shown to be predictive of AVN or non union rates
Classification of Extracapsular Fractures
- Extracapsular fractures are described as stable of unstable depending on posteromedial buttress
Results
- Best result is with healed fracture in anatomical position without AVN
- Quality of reduction is the best predictor of reduction
- No randomised study has shown benefit of capsulotomy or aspiration
- AVN risks (slight ↑ if DHS & derotation used instead of lag screws only)
- undisplaced fracture 5%
- displaced 10 – 15%
- Non union risks
- undisplaced fracture – 5 – 10%
- displaced fracture 15 – 30%
- Young patient closed or open reduction if required
- Fixation with three lag screws
- Old patient, Independent walker
- Undisplaced
- fix as above
- Displaced
- fix vs hemi vs THR
- Undisplaced
- Associated joint disease
- ( RA, Osteoarthritis, Pagets)
- Total joint
- Old patient, nursing home, walker
- Undisplaced
- fix
- Displaced
- cemented hemi or THR
- Undisplaced
- Old patient, non walker
- Pain, fix undisplaced or Moores for displaced
- Little pain, non operative management
Principles of Extracapsular Fractures
- If stable, or able to create stability by reconstruction of calcar, DHS (IM screw has higher risk of thigh pain & higher risk of fracture at cross bolts)
- Unstable, & normal joint IM hip screw
- Unstable / Unreconstructable + arthritic joint Calcar replacing THR / Unipolar
Contraindications
- Little pain or medically unwell patient
- Unlikely to survive > 1 week
- Not yet medically stabilised
Preop Planning
- XR
- Bloods
- Family meeting PRN
- Anaesthetic RV
- Medically optimised
- Hardware available
Reduction Manoeuvres
- Supine on table
- Whitmann
- supine, extension, traction, abduction, IR
- Leadbetter
- supine, flexion, traction, IR 45°, circumduction to position of abduction & extension, stable if remains IR with heel on hand
- Flynn
- supine, flexion, traction, lateral traction, IR, extension
- On traction table
- traction, ER, IR, release traction
Cannulated screws
- Individually mechanically as good as Knowels pins. Probably X 3 (same bending strength as 4, 2X8 mm screws shown to give adequate bending strength but ↓ torsional strength)
- Parallel within 10°
- Spread > 15mm
- Frontal alignment 130°
- Shank should touch strong cortical neck bone
- ( 3 point fixation )
- no support in centre of neck allows shank to shear through cancellous bone displacing fracture
- Inverted triangle: 1. inferior 2. posterior (mid) 3. anterior (mid)
- Tip should sit at 5mm from surface
Other options
- Vascularised fibular bone graft
- Ca PO4 cement – 70% ↑ in fixation strength
DHS
- Screw in centre of intersection of primary compressive & tension trabeculae
- 2 & 3 hole plates have been shown to be just as mechanically stable as 4 hole plates in stable fracture configurations, but this does not take into account the risk of poor screw fixation of plate in osteoporotic diaphyseal bone
Hemiarthroplasty
- Moores 30% revision at 2 years
- Cemented hemi much lower revision rates than Moores, but no account for other morbidity
- (operative time, blood loss, cement pressurization complications, difficulty of revision)
- Bipolar generally no better than unipolar in terms of pain relief or ROM
- ( ??? less acetabular wear demonstrated in some studies but others show no difference )
- Bipolar also difficult or impossible to reduce in case of dislocation
Total hip replacement
- Has higher dislocation & early loosening rates than in arthritic hips
- Better ROM & pain relief though
- Indicated if arthritic or Pagets
- Logically should have better results with anterior approach, large head M on M. but no studies to date
Post Operative Management
- PWB only for young patients, all oldies should be allowed WBAT to prevent complications of recumbency
- Watch for AVN in subcap Fracture’s (usually about 8-12 weeks, but up to 2 years)