Title: Intracapsular Femoral Neck Fractures ORIF
1Intracapsular Femoral Neck Fractures -ORIF
January 19, 2008 Kyle Jeray Greenville Hospital
System
2OBJECTIVES
- ANATOMY
- BONY
- VASCULAR
- CLASSIFICATION
- EXPOSURES
- FIXATION TECHNIQUES
- SUMMARY
3Femoral Neck Fractures-Bimodal Distribution
- Elderly
- Low energy
- Falls
- Often impacted
- Younger
- High energy
- MVC
- Impaction is unusual
4Vascular Anatomy
- Terminal Branches
- - Lateral epiphyseal artery
- - Inferior metaphyseal artery
- - Ligamentum teres artery
5Femoral Head Blood Supply
- Femoral head blood supply is primarily from
medial femoral circumflex a. - Artery enters posteriorly
- No significant blood supply is carried to the
femoral head from the anterior hip capsule
6Classification
- GARDEN
- USEFUL WITH ELDERLY
- PAUWELS
- MORE USEFUL WITH YOUNG
7Arthroplasty vs. ORIF
Old patients should get a Hemi.
8How Old is Old?
- Chronologic age vs. physiologic age
- Many older patients more active and have higher
functional expectations - The real issue is bone density
9Singh Index
- Loss of trabeculae with increasing osteoporosis
- In advanced stages the femoral neck is hollow
10Consequence of Poor Bone Quality
- ORIF - Poor mechanical construct
- Leads to significant shortening and collapse
- Shortened leg
- Shortened abductor moment arm
- Limp
11Poor Bone Quality
- Collapse
- Prominent screws
- Poor gait
12Femoral Neck FracturesThe Key Factors
- Not under your control
- Bone quality
- Degree of posterior comminution
- Under surgeons control
- Accuracy of reduction
- Screw position relative to the femoral neck
13Key 1
Accuracy of Reduction
14Acceptable Reduction
- AP view
- Anatomic or slight valgus
- Cant accept varus
15Reduction Problems
Too much focus on AP view
Dont Forget the Lateral View
16Acceptable Reduction
- Lateral
- Mild or no angulation
- No anterior translation
17Femoral Neck FracturesAcceptable Reduction
- Lateral
- If shaft anteriorly translated fracture will
collapse posteriorly - Press femoral shaft posteriorly to reduce fracture
18Rotational Malalignment
- May be determined based on alignment of principle
compressive trabeculae
19Closed ReductionOperative Technique
- Fracture table
- Reduction
- Confirm reduction with C-arm prior to prep
20Femoral Neck FracturesClosed Reduction
- Begin with hip extended, slightly abducted,
externally rotated - Apply traction
- Internally rotate to lock fracture
21Femoral Neck FracturesClosed Reduction
- If off in lateral plane
- Externally rotate to unlock fracture
- Direct force on thigh to correct displacement
- Internally rotate to lock in
22Open Reduction
- Allows visualization of fracture reduction
- Permits perfect anatomic reduction
- Permits evacuation of capsular hematoma
23Open Reduction
- Lateral skin incision
- Curve anteriorly at iliac crest to allow
disection between tensor fascia lata and gluteus
medius
24Open Reduction
- Incise tensor fascia lata
25Open Reduction
- Develop interval between tensor fascia lata and
gluteus medius (Watson-Jones approach)
26Open Reduction
- Sweep fat off anterior hip capsule
- Hohmann retractor placed along anterior
acetabular rim
27Open Reduction
- Open hip capsule
- Dissect capsule off inter-trochanteric line and
tag with suture
28Open Reduction
- A schantz pin placed in the proximal femur can
aid fracture reduction - Common reduction maneuver
- Traction
- Internal rotation of shaft
29Smith-Peterson Anterior Approach
- Direct view of fracture
- Separate incisions
- Less soft tissue
30Anterior Approach
31Anterior Approach
32Key 2
Screw position relative to the femoral neck
33Femoral Neck FracturesCancellous Screw Fixation
- 3 parallel screws
- No advantage of gt 3 screws
Swiontkowski MF et al. J Orthop Res. 5 433,
1987.
343-Point Cortical Support
61 y/o healthy woman with a valgus impacted
femoral neck fracture
35In OR
10 dayspost-op
3610 days post-op
In OR
37Two Point Fixation
- Screws passing through the osteoporotic femoral
neck have only two points of fixation - Lateral cortex
- Femoral head subchondral bone
- No resistance to shear forces along the plane of
the fracture
38Two Point FixationLoss of Reduction
39Femoral Neck Cortical Support
- Evaluated screw position with respect to cortex
of the femoral neck
Lindequist Tornkvist. J Orthop Trauma. 9
215, 1995.
40Femoral Neck Cortical Support
Number of screws with cortical support
16/18 (89 )
Lindequist Tornkvist. J Orthop Trauma. 9
215, 1995.
41Femoral Neck Cortical Support
Number of screws with cortical support
16/18 (89 ) 13/22 (59 )
significantly worse, plt0.05
Lindequist Tornkvist. J Orthop Trauma. 9
215, 1995.
42Femoral Neck Cortical Support
Number of screws with cortical support
16/18 (89 ) 13/22 (59 ) 0
significantly worse, plt0.05
Lindequist Tornkvist. J Orthop Trauma. 9
215, 1995.
43Good 3-Point Cortical Support
44Femoral Neck FracturesCancellous Screw Fixation
- Avoid starting screws below level of the lesser
trochanter - 20 risk of subtrochanteric fracture
- Karr RK and Schwab JP.
- Clin Orthop. 194 214, 1985.
45Femoral Neck FracturesCancellous Screw Fixation
- At end of case must confirm that screws have not
penetrated joint - Need more than just AP and lateral image
- Live fluoroscopy
- Rotate leg or C-arm
- See end of screw approach, then withdraw from the
articular surface
46ORIF Outcome
- Collapse during healing is common
- Altered hip mechanics
- Prominent painful screws
47ORIF Future
- Injection of resorbable cement-like material with
growth factors - No loss of reduction
- Improved healing
48Femoral Neck FracturesKeys to Successful ORIF
- Assess bone quality
- If OK ? ORIF
- Anatomic reduction
- Good screw position relative to the femoral neck
(3-point cortical support)
49Thank You
50Posterior Neck Comminution
- Hip externally rotates during a fall
- Femoral neck hits against posterior acetabular
wall - May explain comminution often seen in posterior
neck region