Title: Jaroslaw Czubak
1Elastic Stable Intramedullary Nailing in
Fractures of the Lower Limb
Postgraduate Medical Education Centre in Warsaw,
Poland Prof. Adam Gruca Hospital Warsaw Otwock,
Poland
2Plan of the lecture
- Introduction
- Indications
- Contraindications
- Femoral fxs
- Tibial fxs
- Complications
3- Dual Flexible rod system
- Indirect reduction
- Not rigid stability
- Series 123 cases (5-16yrs)
- Acceleration of healing
Ligier, Metaizeau, Prevot et al. Elastic stable
intramedullary nailing of femoral shaft in
children. JBone Jt Surg Br 1988 70
4Biomechanical principles
- symmetrical bracing
- 2 rods - 3 POINTS bearing
flexural
axial
STABILITY
rotational
translational
5Flexible IM nailing
- steel rods / titanium rods
- antegrade / retrograde
6Flexible IM nailing
BENEFITS
- healthy envirement of fx site
- Increased callus formation
- Sufficient stability
- No additional plaster needed
DISADVANTAGES
- Risk of angular or axial deviations
- Risk of pain gt rigid fixation
7Controversies
- straight vs bent rods
- titanium vs steel
- immobilization vs no immobilization
- antegrade vs retrograde
8AO rods 2,0 - 4,0mm
PRE-OP PLANNING
Nail Ø 30-40 Ø of medullary cavity
OR
Nail Ø internal Ø/2 - 0,5mm
9Indications
Biological age
- 3-4 yrs extends to 13-14 yrs
Site of fx
Femur
- diaphyseal
- distal metaphyseal
- subtrochanteric
Tibia
- diaphyseal
- distal metaphyseal
10Contraindications
- intraarticular fxs
- overweight gt 50-60kg
- complex femoral fxs overweight
11Surgical technique
- supine position
- radiolucent table
- extention table for older children
-
- closed reduction manual extention
- F-tool for reduction
12Surgical technique FEMUR
Retrograde insertion
13Surgical technique FEMUR
Retrograde insertion
Insertion point
- 1-2cm above distal epiphyseal plate
- or
- fingerbreadth above prox. patellar pole
C-arm
Extracapsular!!!
14Surgical technique FEMUR
Retrograde insertion
Open medullary cavity
15Surgical technique FEMUR
Retrograde insertion
Pre-bend nails
- 3 times Ø of the medullary canal
- Vertex at fx site
- Load nails into the bone
16Surgical technique FEMUR
Retrograde insertion
Insert first nail
17Surgical technique FEMUR
Retrograde insertion
Advance first nail to the fx zone
18Surgical technique FEMUR
Retrograde insertion
Insert second nail
19Surgical technique FEMUR
Retrograde insertion
Check position of nail tips rotation
20Surgical technique FEMUR
21Surgical technique FEMUR
Retrograde insertion
22Surgical technique FEMUR
Descending technique
Indications
- Distal third
- Distal metaphyseal fx
23Surgical technique FEMUR
Descending technique
Determine nail insertion points
24Surgical technique FEMUR
Descending technique
S-shaped nail
25Surgical technique FEMUR
Descending technique
26Surgical technique TIBIA
Indications
- Closed unstable fx gt 9yrs
- Irreducible and non-retainable fxs
- Polytrauma
ONLY descending!!!
27Surgical technique TIBIA
Insertion points
28Surgical technique TIBIA
Insert nails
29Surgical technique TIBIA
Insert nails
30Mechanical testing
External fixation
greatest rigidity
Steel rods
- stronger than titanium
- intrinsic strength less dependent on the band
techn. - sufficient axial and torsional stiffness
- touch down weight bearing DESPITE FX TYPE
Lee et al. Ender fixation of pediatric femur
fracrures biomechanical analysis. J Pediatr.
Orthop. 2001, 21 442-445
31Mechanical testing
Titanium rods
- satisfactor torsional stability DESPITE FX TYPE
- retrograde double C configuration
- antegrade C and S configuration
Gwyn et al. Rotational controlof
variouspediatric femur fractures stabilized with
titanium elastic intramedullary nails J.
Pediatr. Orthop. 2004, 24 172-177
32Mechanical testing
Greater stiffness and resistance to torsional
deformity
RETROGRADE double C
ANTEGRADE C and S
Frick et al. Biomechanical analysis of antegrade
and retrograde flexible intamedullary nail
fixation of pediatric femoral fractures using a
synthetic bone model. J. Pediatr. Orthop. 2004
24 167
33Mechanical testing
Mechanical properties in 4 points test
RETROGRADE double C
ANTEGRADE C and S
Kiely Mechanical properties of different
combination of flexible nails in a model of a
pediatric femoral fractures. J Pediatr. Ortop.
2002 22 424-427
34Mechanical testing
Subtrochanteric insertion preferred
- fewer knee symptoms
- earlier patients independence
- insertion proximally to standard medial-lateral
Bourdelat D. Fracture of the femoral shaft in
children advantages of the descending medullary
nailing J. Pediatr. Orthop. 1996 110-114
35Mechanical testing
Recommendations for ESIN
- 3-4mm titanium or steel rods
- in children 6-10 yrs
- multiple system injury, head injury,
spasticity, multiple long bone fxs
Selected groups
- extended indication for
- other children with isolated femur fx
- more 6 yrs old
- discontinue external plaster fixation
Ligier 1988 Mann 1986 Heinrich 1992.
36Complications FEMUR
Flynn J. et al. J. Pediatr. Orthop. 2001 21 4-8
56 fxs
4 axial malalignment gt 10
Narayanan et al. J. Pediatr. Orthop. 2004 24
363-369
79 fxs
- 41 skin irritation at insertion site
- 8 malunion
- 2 refractures
- 2 superficail wound infection
Recommendations
- rods straight tight against metaphysis
- always used match diameter rods
37Complications FEMUR
Luhmann et al. J. Pediatr. Orthop. 2003 23
443-447
43 fxs
- 41 complications
- Most minor problems
- Hypertrophic nonunion
- Infection of the joint
Recommendations
- Largest nails
- Leave 2,5 cm out of cortex
38Complications FEMUR - summary
- No randomized series steel vs titanium rods
- Both high successful rate
- Less than 5 of nonunion in most series
- Flexible rods required less operative and
fluoroscopy time than steel rods
The same satisfactory outcome
Gregory et al. Orthopedics 1995 18 645-649
39Complications FEMUR - summary
351 fxs collected from 7 papers
13 complication rate consists of
- nonunion
- mild varus axial deformation
- LLD 3 (either overgrowth or shortening)
Gregory et al. Orthopedics 1995 18 645-649
40Complications FEMUR - summary
COMPLICATION RATE RISES IN
- Comminuted fx
- Large patients
- In which we have to look for other type of
treatment
41Complications FEMUR - summary
Technique related complications
- too long rods painful bursae, limited ROM
- Early rods removing (2-5mths)
- Skin irritation 7
- Lead to deeper infection in 3
- Refracture rate in prelimiray rods removing
- Rod removing time fx line no more visible
Mazda et al. J. Pediatr. Orthop. 1997 6 198-202.
42Complications FEMUR - summary
Comparison traction (90-90) with TESIN
Group 83 fxs
Complication rate
Returning to school Overall recovery
Similar costs!!!
43Complications FEMUR - summary
- mainly technical errors
- too-thin rods
- asymmetry of the frame
- malorientation of the implants
- nonunion never at femur fxs tmt
- infection 2
- overgrowth lt10mm in fx less 10yrs of age
Lascombes P. et al. J. Pediatr. Orrthop. 2006
26 827-834
44Tibial shaft fractures
90 tibial fxs require non op treatment
Parsch K. 1997. J. Pediatr. Orthop. B 6 117-125
Few requires surgical stabilization - requires
implants that do not violate open physes
45Tibial shaft fractures op. treatment
Indications
- acceptable positioning not maintan
- gt10 yrs and older
- selected open fxs
- impending compartment syndrome
- spasticity due to head surgery or CP
- multiple long-bone fxs
- multiple system injuries
- concomitant severe soft-tissues injury
Kubiak EN 2005 Sankar WN 2007 Srivastava AK
2008
46Tibial shaft fx
Results complications
Av. Time of healing
- 20,4 weeks (Srivastava)
- 11 weeks (Sankar)
- 7 weeks (ex-fix 18 weeks)(Kubiak)
The functional outcomes for intramedullary group
better than ex-fix group in categories
- Pain,
- Happiness
- Sports
- Global function
47Tibial shaft fractures
Possible complications
- Compartment syndrome 4/19
- Axial deviations (0-6) in saggital plane
- (9-9) in coronal plane
- Skin irritation 5/19
- LLD 0/19 and 1/24
- Remanipulation 2/19
- Infections 2/24
- Malunions 2/24
48THANK YOU!!!