Treatment of subtrochanteric fractures with short proximal femoral nails resulted in early complications in 20% of patients, emphasizing the need for precise surgical technique.
Observational (n=50)
No
Proximal femoral nailing for subtrochanteric fractures is associated with a 20% early complication rate, highlighting the need for precise surgical technique and appropriate implant selection.
Aim:To analyse the early complications following the use of PFN in subtrochanteric fractures. Background: Osteosynthesis with PFN in subtrochanteric fracture features the advantages of high rotational stability of the head-neck fragment, an unreamed implantation technique and the possibility of static or dynamic distal locking. However, the use of the nail requires technical expertise and is accompanied by some risks of error which can lead to osteosynthesis failure. Methods: Between May 2009 and May 2011, 50 consecutive patients with PFN fixations for subtrochanteric fractures were observed for intraoperative and postoperative complications. Results: We identified intraoperative technical difficulties in four patients and six patients showed postoperative complications. Conclusion: When subtrochanteric fractures are to be stabilised with a PFN, the precise and expert technical performance of implantation is the basic surgical requirement. Good reduction with minimal dissection and the use of an appropriate implant is necessary to avoid treatment failure.
Kanthimathi et al. (Thu,) conducted a observational in Subtrochanteric fractures (n=50). Short proximal femoral nail (PFN) was evaluated on Early complications (intraoperative and postoperative). Treatment of subtrochanteric fractures with short proximal femoral nails resulted in early complications in 20% of patients, emphasizing the need for precise surgical technique.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: