Sy M H, Kinkpé C V, Dakouré P W H, Diémé C B, Sané A D, Ndiaye A, Dansokho A V, Sèye S I L
Service d'Orthopédie et de Traumatologie II, EPS, Hôpital Général de Grand Yoff, Dakar, Sénégal.
Rev Chir Orthop Reparatrice Appar Mot. 2005 Apr;91(2):173-9. doi: 10.1016/s0035-1040(05)84297-7.
Posterior dislocation of the femoral head with fracture is an exceptional hip injury. Emergency reduction is required. Reposition into the acetabular cavity of the dislocated femoral head may not be feasible. Irreducibility, instability, and more rarely accidental fracture of the femoral neck may also occur. We encountered this latter complication in four patients and report here its frequency and mechanism and propose preventive therapeutic measures. Seventy dislocations and fracture-dislocations of the hip were treated in our unit from March 1997 to February 2003. Among these cases, fourteen hip dislocations were complicated by femoral head fractures. Fracture of the femoral neck occurred during reduction in four. All four cases occurred in men, mean age 49.7 years, who were traffic accident victims (drivers or passengers). There were two Pipkin IV fracture-dislocations and two Pipkin II. The first reduction, achieved under general anesthesia in an emergency setting, was performed by an orthopedic surgeon in one patient and a general surgeon in three patients. Arthroplasty was used to treat the femoral neck fracture in three patients and pinning in one. We reviewed retrospectively the clinical and imaging data before and after reduction. Sub-capital fracture situated 4.0 cm (mean, range 3.5-4.5 cm) from the lesser trochanter occurred in all four cases. The head remained attached above and posteriorly to the acetabulum and was rotated less than 90 degrees . The fragment remaining in the acetabulum was displaced in two cases. In one patient, the fracture-dislocation of the head was associated with a fracture of the posterior rim of the acetabulum. This complication appears to result from an abrupt inappropriate reduction movement. The neck fracture would occur when capsulomuscular retention of the femoral head is associated with a head defect which catches on the rim of the acetabulum during the reduction movement. Neck fracture during reduction of traumatic hip dislocation is a serious complication. Prevention of this iatrogenic event requires a slow, progressive reduction limiting the trauma to a minimum; first intention open surgery may be required in selected cases.
股骨头后脱位伴骨折是一种罕见的髋部损伤。需要紧急复位。将脱位的股骨头复位到髋臼腔内可能不可行。也可能发生复位失败、不稳定,更罕见的是股骨颈意外骨折。我们在4例患者中遇到了后一种并发症,在此报告其发生率、机制并提出预防性治疗措施。1997年3月至2003年2月,我们科室共治疗了70例髋部脱位和骨折脱位病例。在这些病例中,14例髋部脱位合并股骨头骨折。其中4例在复位过程中发生股骨颈骨折。所有4例均为男性,平均年龄49.7岁,均为交通事故受害者(司机或乘客)。有2例Pipkin IV型骨折脱位和2例Pipkin II型。首次复位在急诊全身麻醉下进行,1例由骨科医生操作,3例由普通外科医生操作。3例患者采用关节成形术治疗股骨颈骨折,1例采用内固定。我们回顾性分析了复位前后的临床和影像学资料。所有4例均发生小转子上方4.0 cm(平均,范围3.5 - 4.5 cm)处的股骨头下骨折。股骨头仍附着于髋臼上方和后方,旋转角度小于90度。2例髋臼内残留的骨折块发生移位。1例患者,股骨头骨折脱位合并髋臼后缘骨折。这种并发症似乎是由于突然不适当的复位动作所致。当股骨头的关节囊肌肉固定与头部缺损相关联,且在复位过程中头部卡在髋臼边缘时,会发生颈部骨折。创伤性髋部脱位复位过程中的颈部骨折是一种严重的并发症。预防这种医源性事件需要缓慢、逐步复位,将创伤降至最低;在某些特定情况下可能需要一期开放手术。