Wenzel M, Schulz A P, Fuchs S, Frosch K H, Jürgens C
Abteilung Septische Unfallchirurgie und Orthopädie, BG Klinikum Hamburg, Bergedorfer Straße 10, 21033, Hamburg, Deutschland.
ZKF (Zentrum für klinische Forschung), BG Klinikum Hamburg, Hamburg, Deutschland.
Unfallchirurgie (Heidelb). 2023 Aug;126(8):657-661. doi: 10.1007/s00113-022-01219-3. Epub 2022 Aug 9.
To remove a bent femoral nail is always a challenging task for a surgeon. In the last 20 years several case reports and descriptions of techniques are to be found in literature, the goal being to weaken the nail at the apex and then straightening it in situ in most cases. Those reports all have one parameter in common: the necessity to remove the nail relates to a refracture of the femur.We report the case of a patient who presented with the explicit wish to have a bent femoral nail removed and a femoral angulation corrected because of pain in the ipsilateral hip. A femoral fracture had been treated by a Küntscher nail in 1982. A refracture with severe bending of the nail had occurred a short time later, which was treated conservatively without a second surgical procedure.We can show that a planned removal of a bent and well-osseointegrated Küntscher nail can be achieved without complications and that thereby a multiplane angulation in the femur can be corrected, paving the way for a future arthroplasty in this specific case.