
@article{ref1,
title="Outcomes in the treatment of femur fractures in patients with pre-existing spinal cord injury",
journal="Bulletin of the Hospital for Joint Disease (2013)",
year="2019",
author="Perkins, Crystal and Buck, Joseph Stewart and Karunakar, Madhav A.",
volume="77",
number="3",
pages="211-215",
abstract="INTRODUCTION: Spinal cord injured patients have an estimated 25% to 34% lifetime incidence of sustaining an extremity fracture. The objective of this study is to describe the outcomes of femur fractures treated in patients with pre-existing spinal cord injury (SCI) and lower extremity paraplegia. <br><br>MATERIALS AND METHODS: An IRB approved retrospective review of patients 18 years of age and older who sustained a femur fracture a minimum of 2 years following spinal cord injury and received treatment at a regional academic level 1 trauma center over a 10-year period was performed. Patients were divided into two groups based on whether they received operative or nonoperative management of the femoral shaft fracture. The primary outcome assessed was re-operation. Additional outcomes including union, infection, implant failure, and mortality were recorded. <br><br>RESULTS: Twenty-one patients sustaining a total of 25 femur fractures were identified. The most common mechanism of injury was fall during transfer. Sixteen fractures were treated non-operatively and nine were treated operatively. At a mean of 4.1 years of follow-up (range: 1.1 to 12.1 years) six out of nine (66.7%) patients in the operative group required an unplanned secondary surgery compared to two patients (12.5%) in the non-operative group (p = 0.006). Overall, the rate of fracture union was 48%, and there was no difference seen between treatment groups (56.3% in nonoperative group versus 33.3% in operative group, p = 0.28). Six operative patients (66.7%) developed an infection as compared to one patient (6.3%) in the non-operative group (p = 0.002). Three operative patients (33.3%) had failure of fixation with implant cutout. One patient died within 2 years of fracture in the non-operative group (6.3%) as did one patient in the operative group (11.1%), (p = 1.0). <br><br>CONCLUSIONS: Surgical treatment of femur fractures in patients with a pre-existing SCI and lower extremity paraplegia had a higher rate of complications than nonoperative management in our series. Based on our experience, we recommend non-operative treatment of femur fractures in patients with pre-existing spinal cord injury and lower extremity paraplegia.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="2328-4633",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}