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Journal Article

Citation

Khan AM, Tang QO, Spicer D. Open Orthop. J. 2017; 11: 1277-1291.

Affiliation

Department of Trauma and Orthopaedics, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, Praed St, London, W2, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Bentham Science Publishers)

DOI

10.2174/1874325001711011277

PMID

29290866

PMCID

PMC5721335

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Distal femoral fractures account for 3-6% of adult femoral fractures and 0.4% of all fractures and are associated with significant morbidity and mortality rates. As countries develop inter-hospital trauma networks and adapt healthcare policy for an aging population there is growing importance for research within this field.

METHODS: Hospital coding and registry records at the central London Major Trauma Center identified 219 patients with distal femoral shaft fractures that occurred between December 2010 and January 2016. CT-Scans were reviewed resulting in exclusion of 73 inappropriately coded, 10 pediatric and 12 periprosthetic cases. Demographics, mechanism of injury, AO/OTA fracture classification and management were analyzed for the remaining 124 patients with 125 fractures. Mann Whitney U and Chi Squared tests were used during analyses.

RESULTS: The cases show bimodal distribution with younger patients being male (median age 65.6) compared to female (median age 71). Injury caused through high-energy mechanisms were more common in men (70.5%) whilst women sustained injuries mainly from low-energy mechanisms (82.7%) (p<0.0001). Majority of fractures were 33-A (52.0%) followed by 33-B (30.4%) and 33-C (17.6%). Ninety-two (73.6%) underwent operative management. The most common operation was locking plates (64.1%) followed by intramedullary nailing (19.6%).

INTERPRETATION: The epidemiology of a rare fracture pattern with variable degrees of complexity is described. A significant correlation between biological sex and mechanism of injury was identified. The fixation technique favored was multidirectional locking plates. Technical requirements for fixation and low prevalence of 33-C fractures warrant consideration of locating treatment at centers with high caseloads and experience.


Language: en

Keywords

Adult; Distal Femur; Epidemiology; Femoral Fractures; Trauma; Traumatic Knee Injuries

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