High- Versus Low-Energy Intertrochanteric Hip Fractures in Young Patients: Injury Characteristics and Factors Associated With Complications

1Citations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Objective:To compare fracture patterns and associated injuries for young patients with high- versus low-energy intertrochanteric hip fractures and to report on factors associated with complications after surgical fixation of high-energy fractures.Design:Retrospective comparative study.Setting:Academic Level 1 Trauma Center.Patients:A total of 103 patients 50 years of age or younger were included: 80 high-energy fractures and 23 low-energy fractures.Intervention:Cephalomedullary nailing (N = 92) or a sliding hip screw (N = 11).Main Outcome Measures:Radiographic characteristics of fracture morphology, implant position, and reduction quality and postoperative complications were the main outcome measures.Results:Compared with young patients with low-energy fractures, those with high-energy fractures had more fracture comminution (P = 0.013) and higher ISS scores (P < 0.003) and were more likely to require open reduction (P < 0.001). Patients with low-energy fractures from a ground-level fall had higher rates of alcohol abuse (0.032), cirrhosis (0.010), and chronic steroid use (0.048). Overall reoperation rate for high-energy fractures was 7%, including 2 IT fracture nonunions (5%) and 1 deep infection (2%). For high-energy fractures, ASA class (P = 0.026), anterior lag screw position (P = 0.001), and varus malreduction (P < 0.001) were associated with malunion. Four-part fracture (OTA/AO 31A2.3/Jensen 5) (P = 0.028) and residual calcar gap >3 mm (P = 0.03) were associated with reoperation.Conclusions:Surgical treatment of high-energy IT fractures in young patients is technically demanding with potential untoward outcomes. Injury characteristics and severity are significantly different for young patients with high-energy IT fractures compared with low-energy fractures. For young patients with a high-energy IT fracture, surgeons can anticipate a high rate of associated injuries and complex fracture patterns requiring open reduction. For young patients with a low-energy IT fracture, comanagement with a hospitalist or a geriatrician should be considered because they may be physiologically older.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Stenquist, D. S., Albertson, S., Bailey, D., Paladino, L., Flanagan, C. D., Stang, T., … Mir, H. R. (2023). High- Versus Low-Energy Intertrochanteric Hip Fractures in Young Patients: Injury Characteristics and Factors Associated With Complications. Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma, 37(5), 222–229. https://doi.org/10.1097/BOT.0000000000002587

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free