Fixation Options
Aim
- Aim to achieve stability of fracture to promote solid union with anatomical mechanical alignment in all 3 planes (coronal & sagittal angulation, length, rotation)
- (in the shortest time, whilst promoting early rehabilitation, with the lowest risk of complications)
Options
- Plaster (spica)
- Traction (skin on skeletal, gallows, +/- Thomas splint)
- External Fixateur
- ORIF ( plates & screws, fixed angle devices, locking plates)
- Flexible nails
- Locked rigid nails
Classifications
Subtrochanteric (Russell Taylor classification)
Type | Decriptions |
---|---|
1A | below lesser troch, above isthmus |
1B | into lesser but below piriform fossa |
2A | into piriform fossa but below lesser |
2B | into fossa & lesser |
- Shaft: (Winquist & Hansen)
Type | Description |
---|---|
0 | no comminution |
1 | small butterfly |
2 | larger butterfly, <50% of diameter |
3 | large butterfly, > 50% of diameter |
4 | segmental comminution |
5 | bone loss |
- Open fracture
- nail unless unable to debride back to clean bone or there is significant delay or other injuries that change management
- Neck fractures take precedence & need to be fixed prior to fixation of shaft
- Floating Knee
- fix femur first, ? up & down knee nails
Contraindications
- Depends on the patient, the injury, surgeons skill, available hardware, etc
- Eg: Try to avoid growth plates in skeletally immature
- Some open fractures better exfixed at least temporarily
- Soft tissue easier to cover over nail
- Preexisting bone deformity may preclude use of nails ( Fracture, Pagets, FD)
Traction
Skin traction
- balanced Hamilton Russel traction directs pull in line with the femur.
- Not > 5kg
- Gallows traction for <18/12 old. Not for patient > 10kg
Skeletal traction
- Steinman pin just to metaphyseal side of metaphyseal – diaphyseal junction in line with longitudinal axis of shaft on lateral.
- This position is extra articular & should avoid the saphenous nerve & vein.
- Place with knee in flexion to avoid tethering of vastus lateralis
External Fixateur
- Useful for children not amenable to flexible nails or closed techniques
- Unilateral frame with 5 or 6 mm Schanz screws
- flex knee during insertion distally
- Flexible nails for transverse stable fracture configurations in children with open physes
Locked IM nails
- Position supine +/- ± traction table or lateral if obese (lateral has ↑ risk of valgus deformity especially if distal fracture)
- Antegrade
- start in piriform fossa or greater trochanter & in line with the shaft on the lateral.
- Err anteriorly with high fractures as fracture dissipates Hoops stresses on bone & entry point allows easier reduction & proximal recon cross bolting
- Retrograde
- starting point just anterior to PCL insertion & in line with the shaft in 2 planes
- Proximal screws should be above lesser trochanter
- Reaming
- ↑ percentage & speed of union
- ↑ risk of H/O
- Static Locking
- dynamic locking results in 10% failure rate even in fractures judged “stable”
- X 1 cross bolt OK if “stable”
- X 2 cross bolt if grade 3-5
Complications
- Acceptable deformity
- LLD <2cm
- rotational mal alignment <15°
- coronal malalignment < 5°
- Non union is treated with reaming & exchange nail
- Fat embolus syndrome
- less with stabilistion within 24 hours
- higher with concomitant chest injury or pulmonary dysfunction
- ?? effect of reaming
- Nerve
- Pudendal nerve palsy from Post
- Peroneal nerve palsy
- Loss of fixation, hardware failure
- Irritation from prominent metal ware
- Heterotopic ossification
Results
- 95% union with reamed cross bolted nail