Fracture Shaft Femur
Fracture Shaft Femur
Fracture Shaft Femur
Shaft
Dr. A. Pathak
Assistant Professor
Orthopaedics
Gandhi Medical college, Bhopal
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Femur Fractures
Common injury due to major violent trauma
1 femur fracture/ 10,000 people
More common in people < 25 yo or >65 yo
Femur fracture leads to reduced activity for 107
days, the average length of hospital stay is 25
days
Motor vehicle, motorcycle, auto-pedestrian,
aircraft, and gunshot wound accidents are most
frequent causes
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The Proximal femoral shaft is well
padded with powerful muscles
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MECHANISM OF INJURY
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MECHANISM OF INJURY
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Femur Fractures- Associated
Injuries
Struck by car- triad of femur
fracture, torso injuries, head injury
Potential damage to physes of femur
and proximal tibia in children
Head Injury – spasticity can make
traction and cast treatment difficult
Abdominal injury – spica cast can
constrict abdomen and limit ability to
examine
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Physical Exam
Complete exam: head, chest,
abdomen, and other skeletal
segments
Document distal neurologic and
vascular function
Palpate all bones
First Aid principles - Splint or
traction, especially prior to transfer
to another institution
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Radiographic Evaluation
AP Pelvis
AP/Lat femur
Visualize hip & knee joints
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Classification
Open or closed
Location of fracture- subtrochanteric,
diaphyseal (proximal, mid, distal
third), supracondylar
Fracture pattern- transverse, spiral,
oblique, comminuted, greenstick
Amount of shortening
Angular deformity
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Decision Making
Age
Mechanism of injury
Fracture pattern & location
Associated Injuries
Surgeon preference
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Fracture pattern
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Spiral fractures are seen where fall on a
fixed foot transmits an oblique twisting
force
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Transverse or short oblique fractures are due to high
velocity direct trauma and are commonest in RTA
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Segmntal or Communited fractures are due to a combination of
direct and twisting force
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MID SHAFT FEMORAL FRACTURES
Due to muscle pull the proximal fragment is abducted flexed
and externally rotated d/t pull of illio-psoas and glutei
The distal fragement adducts
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DISTAL THIRD FEMORAL FRACTURES
The proximal fragment may abduct or adduct while the distal
fragment is flexed by gastrocnemius
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Soft tissue bleed might be extensive
Upto 2 litres of blood may be lost in compound
injuries
Closed fractures may pour as much as 1 litre of
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blood in the thigh
Traction Techniques
Skin or skeletal
Avoid physes if place skeletal traction
pins in children
Place pin perpendicular to shaft to avoid
varus/valgus angulation
Longitudinal in line traction for comfort
prior to definitive treatment
Split Russells traction (90-90) if awaiting
early healing prior to casting
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Classification
Most femoral shaft fractures have some
degree of communition, although it may not
be readily apparent on x-ray.
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This forms the basis of the Winquist
classification.
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CLINICAL FEATURES
PAIN
SWELLING
DEFORMITY
INABILITY TO BEAR WEIGHT
SHOCK AND ITS SYMPTOMS
BEWARE! MULTISYSTEM INURY
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X RAYS
X rays can be postponed until shock is taken care
of.
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EMERGENCY CARE
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Hare traction splint for initial
reduction of femur fractures prior to
OR or skeletal traction
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COMPLICATIONS EXPECTED AT
THIS STAGE
SHOCK NOT
FAT EMBOLISM
RESONDING TO
AND ARDS
RESUSCITATION
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FIXATION ?
Best done at this stage with
interlocking intramedullary nailing
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Treatment in traction
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Gallows and Russel’s
tractions need a spica
apllication after 4-5 weeks
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Hip spica
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Surgical Options
Plate & screw fixation
External fixation
Flexible nailing
Rigid nailing
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Gerhard Kuntscher
Technik der Marknagelung, 1945
Straight
nail with 3
point
fixation
First IM
nailing but
not locking
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Klemm K, Schellman WD:
Veriegelung des marnagels,
1972
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Methods of internal fixation
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Flexible Nailing
Advantages – allows early mobilization
without cast, cosmetic scars, avoids
physes and blood supply to femoral head
Disadvantages – later nail removal, ends
may irritate soft tissues, may not be
amenable to some fracture patterns (very
proximal or distal, comminution)
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ORIF with Plates/Screws
Advantages – rigid, technique familiar
to most surgeons, allows early
motion, favorable results reported in
children with associated head injuries
Disadvantages- large scar, possible
refracture after plate removed, higher
infection rate in some earlier series
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ORIF Plate Fixation
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Methods of internal fixation
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Percutaneous Bridge
Plating
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Open Femur Fracture
Principles
IV antibiotics, tetanus
prophylaxis
emergent irrigation &
debridement
skeletal stabilization
External fixation best
option with severe
soft tissue injury
soft tissue coverage
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External fixation
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Complications
Early :
• Shock
• Thromboembolism
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Complications
Late :
• Delyed or non union
• Malunion
• Joint stiffness
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