Abstract

To investigate the position of the anterior fracture line in AO/Orthopaedic Trauma Association (AO/OTA) type A2 unstable intertrochanteric fractures and its impact on the incidence of anterior cortical reduction loss after cephalomedullary nail fixation. A clinical data of 95 patients with intertrochanteric fractures who met the selection criteria between April 2020 and February 2023 was retrospectively analyzed. All patients were treated with cephalomedullary nail fixation, and the intra- and post-operative imaging data were complete. Among them, there were 37 males and 58 females. The age ranged from 61 to 97 years, with an average of 79.6 years. The time from injury to operation ranged from 7 hours to 11 days, with an average of 2.8 days. According to the 2018-AO/OTA classification standard, there were 39 cases of type 31-A2.2 and 56 cases of type 31-A2.3. Intraoperative fluoroscopy was used to record the number of patients with satisfactory fracture alignment. The preoperative CT data were imported into Mimics17.0 software to simulate the fracture reduction and measure the distance between the anterior fracture line and the intertrochanteric line bony ridge. The fractures were classified as transcapsular fractures, extra-capsular fractures, and intra-capsular fractures according to the distance. CT three-dimensional reconstruction was performed within 2 weeks after operation to observe the number of patients with anterior cortical reduction loss. The postoperative anterior cortical reduction loss incidence in patients with satisfactory fracture alignment, and the relationship between postoperative anterior cortical reduction loss and the position of the anterior fracture line were observed. There were 52 cases (54.7%) of transcapsular fractures, 24 cases (25.3%) of extra-capsular fractures, and 19 cases (20.0%) of intra-capsular fractures. Among them, 41 of the 52 transcapsular fractures had satisfactory fracture alignment, and 4 (9.8%) of them experienced anterior cortical reduction loss after operation; 19 of the 24 extra-capsular fractures had satisfactory fracture alignment, and no anterior cortical reduction loss occurred; 16 of the 19 intra-capsular fractures had satisfactory fracture alignment, and 7 (43.8%) of them experienced anterior cortical reduction loss after operation. There was a significant difference in the incidence of anterior cortical reduction loss between groups ( χ 2=8.538, P=0.003). All patients were followed up 3-26 months (mean, 9 months). Among them, 91 cases had fracture healing, and 4 cases had nonunion. In AO/OTA type A2 unstable intertrochanteric fractures, where the anterior fracture line is located within the joint capsule, there is a high risk of anterior cortical reduction loss after operation.

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