Abstract

PurposeIn femoral trochanteric fractures, fractures whose fracture lines extend to the basal neck or to the subtrochanteric part have high instability. Area classification can identify such instable fractures. The best choices of internal fixators for femoral trochanteric fractures were investigated according to area classification.MethodsFemoral trochanteric fractures were investigated with respect to area classification. In area classification, the proximal femur is divided into 4 areas with 3 boundary lines: Line-1 is the center of the neck; Line-2 is the border between the neck and the trochanteric zone; and Line-3 links the inferior borders of the greater and lesser trochanters. A fracture in only the third area was classified as type 3; one in the second and third areas was classified as type 2–3.ResultsOf 284 femoral trochanteric fractures, 50.0 % were type 3, 21 % were type 2–3, 22 % were type 3–4, and 7.4 % were type 2–3–4. Cases with cut-out or excessive telescoping of the internal fixator were defined as the Failure-group; 5.3 % of type 3 and 10.9 % of type 2–3 were in the Failure-group only when short femoral nails with a single rag screw were used. On the other hand, there were no Failure-group cases of type 2–3 with double rag screws. Only 1 case involved a long nail for type 3, while a long nail was used in about half of type 3–4 cases (Chi square test: P < 0.0001).ConclusionsA double rag screw should be considered for type 2–3. A long nail should be considered for type 3–4.

Highlights

  • Femoral trochanteric fracture is a very common injury (Nikkel et al 2012; Kannus et al 1996)

  • The proximal femur is divided into 4 areas with 3 boundary lines: Line-1 is the center of the neck; Line-2 is the border between the neck and the trochanteric zone; and Line-3 links the inferior borders

  • Fractures within only the trochanteric part are classified as type 3, fractures extending from the trochanteric part to the basal neck are classified as type 2–3, fractures extending from the trochanteric part to the subtrochanteric part are classified as type 3–4, and fractures extending from the basal neck to the subtrochanteric part are classified as type 2–3–4 (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Femoral trochanteric fracture is a very common injury (Nikkel et al 2012; Kannus et al 1996). In the so-called femoral trochanteric fracture, a fracture whose fracture line extends to the basal neck or the subtrochanteric part is not rare. A fracture extending from the basal neck to the subtrochanteric part is included among socalled femoral trochanteric fractures. Such fractures have high instability, and the treatment method is different. Fractures are classified as type 1, type 2, type 3, type 4, type 1–2, type 2–3, type 3–4, type 1–2–3, type 2–3–4, and type 1–2–3–4 (10 types) In this classification, so-called neck fractures, basicervical fractures, trochanteric fractures, and subtrochanteric fractures are defined by the boundary lines. Area classification can classify the fractures that cross the zones (Kijima et al 2014). Fractures within only the trochanteric part are classified as type 3, fractures extending from the trochanteric part to the basal neck are classified as type 2–3, fractures extending from the trochanteric part to the subtrochanteric part are classified as type 3–4, and fractures extending from the basal neck to the subtrochanteric part are classified as type 2–3–4 (Fig. 1)

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