Cannulated Screw Fixation For Femoral Neck Fractures : A 5-year Experience In A Single Institution

Cannulated screw fixation is a widely accepted surgical method for management of fractures of the neck of femur especially in patients with poor premorbid conditions, minimally displaced fractures and those from a younger age group. A five year retrospective study was carried out in 53 consecutive p...

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Main Authors: Khoo CCH, Amber Haseeb, Vivek Ajit Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Malaysian Orthopaedic Association 2014-07-01
Series:Malaysian Orthopaedic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.morthoj.org/2014/v8n2/cannulated-screw-fixation.pdf
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spelling doaj-f062fb3f09ba42bc9c19706ef2e46c4a2021-05-02T01:41:45ZengMalaysian Orthopaedic AssociationMalaysian Orthopaedic Journal1985-25332014-07-01821421http://dx.doi.org/10.5704/MOJ.1407.010 Cannulated Screw Fixation For Femoral Neck Fractures : A 5-year Experience In A Single InstitutionKhoo CCH0Amber Haseeb1 Vivek Ajit Singh2MBBSMBBSFRCSCannulated screw fixation is a widely accepted surgical method for management of fractures of the neck of femur especially in patients with poor premorbid conditions, minimally displaced fractures and those from a younger age group. A five year retrospective study was carried out in 53 consecutive patients between 2006 to 2010 to determine the pattern of injuries, management, outcomes and the associated predictive factors.All the patients underwent cannulated screw fixation, with 37 (69.8%) having had surgery within 24 hours and the remaining 16 (30.2%) 24 hours after the initial injury. All patients were followed up to union of fractures and complications thereafter if any. Good outcome was observed in 43 (81.1%) patients leaving only 10 (18.9%) patients with a poor outcome, of whom nine developed avascular necrosis (90%) and one non-union (10%). We found no significant relationship between the incidence of avascular necrosis and age of patient, fracture displacement, numbers of cannulated screws used, fracture reduction acceptability and anatomical location of the fracture. The time interval from injury to surgery and the presence of posterior comminution did seem to influence the rate of avascular necrosis but due to the small number of patients, was not statistically significant.We conclude that cannulated screw fixation is a viable option of treatment for fractures of the neck of femur.http://www.morthoj.org/2014/v8n2/cannulated-screw-fixation.pdffemoral neck fracturesscrew fixation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Khoo CCH
Amber Haseeb
Vivek Ajit Singh
spellingShingle Khoo CCH
Amber Haseeb
Vivek Ajit Singh
Cannulated Screw Fixation For Femoral Neck Fractures : A 5-year Experience In A Single Institution
Malaysian Orthopaedic Journal
femoral neck fractures
screw fixation
author_facet Khoo CCH
Amber Haseeb
Vivek Ajit Singh
author_sort Khoo CCH
title Cannulated Screw Fixation For Femoral Neck Fractures : A 5-year Experience In A Single Institution
title_short Cannulated Screw Fixation For Femoral Neck Fractures : A 5-year Experience In A Single Institution
title_full Cannulated Screw Fixation For Femoral Neck Fractures : A 5-year Experience In A Single Institution
title_fullStr Cannulated Screw Fixation For Femoral Neck Fractures : A 5-year Experience In A Single Institution
title_full_unstemmed Cannulated Screw Fixation For Femoral Neck Fractures : A 5-year Experience In A Single Institution
title_sort cannulated screw fixation for femoral neck fractures : a 5-year experience in a single institution
publisher Malaysian Orthopaedic Association
series Malaysian Orthopaedic Journal
issn 1985-2533
publishDate 2014-07-01
description Cannulated screw fixation is a widely accepted surgical method for management of fractures of the neck of femur especially in patients with poor premorbid conditions, minimally displaced fractures and those from a younger age group. A five year retrospective study was carried out in 53 consecutive patients between 2006 to 2010 to determine the pattern of injuries, management, outcomes and the associated predictive factors.All the patients underwent cannulated screw fixation, with 37 (69.8%) having had surgery within 24 hours and the remaining 16 (30.2%) 24 hours after the initial injury. All patients were followed up to union of fractures and complications thereafter if any. Good outcome was observed in 43 (81.1%) patients leaving only 10 (18.9%) patients with a poor outcome, of whom nine developed avascular necrosis (90%) and one non-union (10%). We found no significant relationship between the incidence of avascular necrosis and age of patient, fracture displacement, numbers of cannulated screws used, fracture reduction acceptability and anatomical location of the fracture. The time interval from injury to surgery and the presence of posterior comminution did seem to influence the rate of avascular necrosis but due to the small number of patients, was not statistically significant.We conclude that cannulated screw fixation is a viable option of treatment for fractures of the neck of femur.
topic femoral neck fractures
screw fixation
url http://www.morthoj.org/2014/v8n2/cannulated-screw-fixation.pdf
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AT vivekajitsingh cannulatedscrewfixationforfemoralneckfracturesa5yearexperienceinasingleinstitution
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