Abstract

Floating hip fractures are severe and rare injuries with high complication rate and lack of standard management. The purpose of this retrospective study was to review the outcomes of a case series of polytraumatized patients with floating hip injuries, in order to describe the relationship between complication rate and floating hip injury type, the pathomechanism of injury, and the surgical treatment strategy. Forty-five patients with floating hip injuries were analyzed. Complication rate, mechanism of injury, and surgical strategy (damage control orthopedics, stages of internal fixation) were recorded. Fractures were classified using the Mueller system for floating hips and AO/OTA system for the other fractures. Of the 45 patients with floating hip injuries, 23 (51.1%) developed complications. The results revealed that the complication rate was associated with the instability and type of the pelvic or acetabular fracture (61-C AO/OTA pelvic fracture [73.3%; p = 0.04], 62-B AO/OTA acetabular fracture [88.8%; p = 0.03]). Vertical shear (VS) pelvic fractures were related to middle-distal femoral fractures and lateral compression/anteroposterior compression (LC/APC) pelvic lesions were associated to proximal femoral fractures (p = 0.012). Complications were associated with the severity and instability of the pelvic and acetabular type of fractures. The pathomechanism causing Mueller type B and C floating hip injuries was illustrated. A two-stage "femur first" surgical approach was the preferred one for definite internal fixation of fractures.

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