Through-the-nail technique.
Published online: Apr 27 2005
Eleftherios TSIRIDIS, Amir Ali NARVANI, Constantin SCHIZAS
From the Whittington Hospital, London, United Kingdom
Abstract
Ipsilateral fractures of the neck of the femur and the
femoral shaft are uncommon injuries and they present
considerable challenge as the concurrent survival
of the femoral head and union of the femoral
shaft fracture is of paramount importance.
We present a young male patient who sustained a
Garden IV fracture of the neck of his right femur following
a road traffic accident, with the fracture
being adjacent to an ipsilateral intramedullary nail
inserted 10 years previously for a midshaft femoral
fracture ; the nail was broken, with its proximal fragment
lying behind the greater trochanter. The patient
was operated on within 6 hours from the injury. An
attempt was made to remove the nail but this was
abandoned as warring iatrogenic bone loss was
encountered, due to the proximity of the fracture to
the nail entry point. Instead, three cancellous lagscrews
were inserted to fix the fracture in a triangular
fashion. Two screws placed posteriorly behind the
nail, and one anterior screw through the nail.