Risk of septic knee following retrograde intramedullary nailing of open and closed femur fractures

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>One potential complication of retrograde femoral nailing in the treatment of femur fractures is the risk of septic knee. This risk theoretically increases in open fractures as a contaminated fracture site has the potential to seed th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Halvorson Jason J, Barnett Marc, Jackson Ben, Birkedal John P
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-02-01
Series:Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research
Online Access:http://www.josr-online.com/content/7/1/7
id doaj-2d1d52078fec41f1bcbc0332d52f6b0c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2d1d52078fec41f1bcbc0332d52f6b0c2020-11-25T01:10:58ZengBMCJournal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research1749-799X2012-02-0171710.1186/1749-799X-7-7Risk of septic knee following retrograde intramedullary nailing of open and closed femur fracturesHalvorson Jason JBarnett MarcJackson BenBirkedal John P<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>One potential complication of retrograde femoral nailing in the treatment of femur fractures is the risk of septic knee. This risk theoretically increases in open fractures as a contaminated fracture site has the potential to seed the instrumentation being passed in and out of the sterile intraarticular starting point. There are few studies examining this potential complication in a relatively commonly practiced technique.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>All patients who received a retrograde femoral nail for femur fracture between September 1996 and November 2006 at a Level 1 trauma center were retrospectively reviewed. This yielded 143 closed fractures, 38 open fractures and 4 closed fractures with an ipsilateral traumatic knee arthrotomy. Patient follow-up records were reviewed for documentation of septic knee via operative notes, wound culture or knee aspirate data, or the administration of antibiotics for suspected septic knee.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>No evidence of septic knee was found in the 185 fractures examined in the dataset. Utilizing the Wilson confidence interval, the rate of septic knee based on our population was no greater than 2%, with that of the open fracture group alone being 9%.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Based on these results and review of the literature, the risk of septic knee in retrograde femoral nailing of both open and closed femoral shaft fractures appears low but potentially not insignificant.</p> <p>Funding</p> <p>There was no outside source of funding from either industry or other organization for this study.</p> http://www.josr-online.com/content/7/1/7
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Halvorson Jason J
Barnett Marc
Jackson Ben
Birkedal John P
spellingShingle Halvorson Jason J
Barnett Marc
Jackson Ben
Birkedal John P
Risk of septic knee following retrograde intramedullary nailing of open and closed femur fractures
Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research
author_facet Halvorson Jason J
Barnett Marc
Jackson Ben
Birkedal John P
author_sort Halvorson Jason J
title Risk of septic knee following retrograde intramedullary nailing of open and closed femur fractures
title_short Risk of septic knee following retrograde intramedullary nailing of open and closed femur fractures
title_full Risk of septic knee following retrograde intramedullary nailing of open and closed femur fractures
title_fullStr Risk of septic knee following retrograde intramedullary nailing of open and closed femur fractures
title_full_unstemmed Risk of septic knee following retrograde intramedullary nailing of open and closed femur fractures
title_sort risk of septic knee following retrograde intramedullary nailing of open and closed femur fractures
publisher BMC
series Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research
issn 1749-799X
publishDate 2012-02-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>One potential complication of retrograde femoral nailing in the treatment of femur fractures is the risk of septic knee. This risk theoretically increases in open fractures as a contaminated fracture site has the potential to seed the instrumentation being passed in and out of the sterile intraarticular starting point. There are few studies examining this potential complication in a relatively commonly practiced technique.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>All patients who received a retrograde femoral nail for femur fracture between September 1996 and November 2006 at a Level 1 trauma center were retrospectively reviewed. This yielded 143 closed fractures, 38 open fractures and 4 closed fractures with an ipsilateral traumatic knee arthrotomy. Patient follow-up records were reviewed for documentation of septic knee via operative notes, wound culture or knee aspirate data, or the administration of antibiotics for suspected septic knee.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>No evidence of septic knee was found in the 185 fractures examined in the dataset. Utilizing the Wilson confidence interval, the rate of septic knee based on our population was no greater than 2%, with that of the open fracture group alone being 9%.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Based on these results and review of the literature, the risk of septic knee in retrograde femoral nailing of both open and closed femoral shaft fractures appears low but potentially not insignificant.</p> <p>Funding</p> <p>There was no outside source of funding from either industry or other organization for this study.</p>
url http://www.josr-online.com/content/7/1/7
work_keys_str_mv AT halvorsonjasonj riskofseptickneefollowingretrogradeintramedullarynailingofopenandclosedfemurfractures
AT barnettmarc riskofseptickneefollowingretrogradeintramedullarynailingofopenandclosedfemurfractures
AT jacksonben riskofseptickneefollowingretrogradeintramedullarynailingofopenandclosedfemurfractures
AT birkedaljohnp riskofseptickneefollowingretrogradeintramedullarynailingofopenandclosedfemurfractures
_version_ 1725173199272935424