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General Principles of Fractures

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Title: General Principles of Fractures


1
General Principles of Fractures
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Liu
Xueyong (???)
2
Introduction
3
Definition
  • A fracture indicates disruption of the continuity
    or integrity of bone

4
Etiology
  • direct trauma
  • indirect trauma
  • by transmission of stress e.g. fracture of
    clavicle
  • by muscular (quardriceps) contraction e.g.
    fracture of patella

5
  • continuous stress (fatigue fracture) e.g.
    fracture of lower 1/3 fibular shaft , fracture of
    the 2nd and 3rd metatarsal bone
  • pathological fracture because of cortical
    desruption which resulted from bone diseases such
    as osteomyelitis and benign, malignant, or
    metastatic lesions of bone, the fracture happened
    with slight trauma

6
Classification
  • close fracture the end of fracture did not
    communicate with the environment
  • open fracture the end of fracture communicated
    with the environment, e.g. pubic fracture with
    bladder or urethra injury, coccyx fracture with
    rectal injury

7
  • incomplete fracture crack(fissure) fracture and
    green stick fracture(in children)
  • complete fracture

8
Complete fracture
  • transverse fracture
  • oblique fracture
  • spiral fracture
  • comminuted fracture T or Y type or butterfly
  • impacted fracture
  • compression fracture e.g. vertebral body or
    calcaneus fracture
  • sunken fracture skull fracture
  • epiphyseal injury

9
  • Stable fracture crack, green stick , transverse
    , compressive, impacted fracture
  • Unstable fracture easily displace, e.g. oblique
    fracture, spiral fracture, comminuted
    fracture

10
OTA classification of long bone fractures
11
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12
  • Taylor and Martin proposed a
    classification of metaphyseal fractures (SUD) in
    which the main fracture is characterized as
    stable (S), unstable (U), or with diaphyseal
    extension (D). These are further divided into
    three subtypes 0, extraarticular 1, less than 2
    mm of displacement and 2, more than 2 mm of
    displacement

13
Classification of metaphyseal fractures (SUD)
14
Displacement of fracture
  • angular displacement
  • lateral displacement
  • shortening displacement
  •   separated displacement
  •   rotational displacement

15
Clinical findings and Radiological findings
16
Systemic features
  • Shock resulting from loss of blood in patients
    with pelvic, femoral or multiple fracture ,
    severe open fracture or fracture complicating
    with vital viscreal injury
  • Fever resulting from absorption of hematoma,
    usually lt38º

17
loss of blood(ml)
18
Local features
  • Specific signs
  •    Deformity
  •    Abnormal motion
  • Bony crepitus or grafting

19
Unspecific signs
  • pain and tenderness
  •  swelling and visible
  • bruising (ecchymosis)
  •  dysfunction

20
Radiological findings
  • A-P and lateral view X-ray including upper or low
    joint
  • X-ray findings fracture line
  • If necessary, radiological examination is
    performned again after 2 weeks

21
Some special views
  • AP and oblique view for fractures of metacarpus
    and metatarsus
  • lateral and axial view for calcaneus fracture
  • AP and butterfly view for fractures of scaphoid

22
Complications of fracture
23
Early period
  •  shock
  • visceral injury such as liver, spleen, lung,
    bladder and urethra, rectum injury
  • vital tissues injury such as arteries, spinal
    cord, peripheral nerves
  • fat embolism syndrome(FES)
  • Compartment syndrome

24
Fat embolism syndrome(FES)
  • FES is the unexpected occurrence of hypoxia,
    confusion, and patechiae a few days after long
    bone fractures

25
The etiology of FES
  • The broken bones liberate marrow fat that
    embolizes to the lungs and brain in which fat
    droplets enter the venous circulation via torn
    veins adjacent to the fracture site
  • The biochemical theory suggests that mediators
    from the fracture site alter lipid solubility
    causing coalescence, since normal chylomicrons
    are less than 1 µm in diameter
  • Elevated serum lipase levels hydrolyzes neutral
    fat to free fatty acids and causes local
    endothelial damages in the lungs and other tissues

26
Compartment syndrome
  • Compartment syndrome is a condition
    characterized by raised pressure within a closed
    space with a potential to cause irreversible
    damage to the contents of the closed space

27
  • The prerequisites for the development of
    a compartment syndrome include a cause of raised
    pressure within a confined tissue space called
    osteofascial compartment which is composed of
    bone, deep fascia, interosseous membrane and
    intermuscular septum.

28
  • Any condition that increases the contents or
    reduces the volume of a compartment could be
    related to the development of an acute
    compartment syndrome.

29
  • The most common cause associated with decrease
    in the size of the compartment is
  • the application of a tight cast, constrictive
    dressings, or pneumatic antishock garments.
    Closure of fascial defects has been shown to be
    associated with the development of an acute
    compartment syndrome. This condition most
    commonly occurs in anterior compartment of the
    leg, in patients who present with symptomatic
    muscle hernias.

30
  • A number of conditions have been shown to
    increase the compartment contents and lead to
    compartment syndrome.
  • These involove hemorrage within the
    compartment, or to accumulation of fluid(edema)
    within the compartment . The former is most
    commonly associated with fractures of the tibia,
    elbow, forearm, or femur, whereas the latter is
    most commonly associated with postischemic
    swelling after arterial injuries or restoration
    of arterial flow after thromosis of a major
    artery

31
  • The symptom of pain out of proportion to the
    known injury and the findings of a tense, swollen
    compartment with some degree of passively induced
    strench pain represent the earliest
    manifestations of an acute compartment syndrome
  • By the time sensory deficits is obvious,
    irreversible changes to nerves or muscles may
    already have occurred. To wait the development of
    frank motor weakness is to invite diaster.
    Paresis is a late finding and, if present,
    demands immediated surgical intervention

32
  • The only effective way to decompress an
    acute compartment syndrome is by surgical
    fasciotomy.

33
Late period complication of fracture
  • hypostatic pneumonia
  • bedsore
  • deep venous thrombosis(DVT) of lower limbs
  • patients with injuries to the pelvis and lower
    extremities are especially prone to DVT

34
  • Infection open fractures
  • myositis ossificans the ossification of soft
    tissues adjacent to joints(elbow commonly)
  • traumatic arthritis common in intraarticular
    fractures

35
  • joint stiffness
  • the most common
  • avascular necrosis of bonecommon in fractures of
    hand scaphoid and femoral neck
  • ischaemic contracture of muscle the consequence
    of compartment syndrome, claw hand

36
  • acute bone atrophy (Sudeck atrophy)
  • the osteoporosis with pain adjacent to the
    fracture site, commonly in fractures of hand and
    foot. The pain and vascular systolic-diastolic
    disorders are main features.

37
Biology of fracture healing
38
Hunter and Brighton described the classic stages
of natural bone repair
  • 1. The impact stage the interval from the
    first application of force to the bone until the
    energy of the force is completely dissipated,
    resulting in energy absorption by the bone until
    fracture occurs.
  • 2. Inflammation stage lasts 1 to 3 days, and
    is evidenced by pain, swelling, and heat.
    Inflammatory cells arrive at the injured site
    accompanied by vascular ingrowth and cellular
    proliferation.

39
  • 3.induction stage begins during the impact and
    inflammatory stages and involves the formation of
    inducers and humoral factors that direct the
    regeneration of bone.
  • 4.soft callus stage corresponds clinically to
    the time when clinical union occurs by fibrous or
    cartilaginous tissue. Histologically it is
    characterized by vascular ingrowth of capillaries
    into the fracture callus and the appearance of
    chondroblasts.

40
  • 5.Hard callus stage the fibrocartilaginous union
    is replaced by fibroosseous union. Clinically
    this usually occurs at 3 to 4 months
  • 6. Stage of remodeling begins with clinical and
    roentgenographic union and persists until the
    bone is returned to normal, including restoration
    of the medullary canal. Histologically the
    fibrous bone is replaced with lamellar one.

41
Two groups of growth-producing substances at the
site of fractures
  • Peptide-signaling molecules (growth factors)
    bone morphogenetic proteins, fibroblast growth
    factors, platelet-derived growth factor
  • Immunomodulatory cytokines interleukin-1 and
    interleukin-6
  • These substances are known to be produced during
    fracture healing and to participate in the
    regulation of the associated responses

42
In a word, the Process of fracture Healing
  • Organization of haemotoma and interfragment
    stabilization by fibrocartilage differentiation
    2 weeks
  • Formation of original callusrestoration of
    continuity by intramembranous and endochondral
    ossification, 4-8 weeks
  • Remodeling of the fracture site
  • 8-12 weeks

43
The standard of healing
  • No tenderness
  •  No abnormal mobility
  •  X-ray continuous callus, fracture line is
    opaque
  •  After removing the external fixation,
    rehabilitation of function, and no deformity
    within 2 weeks

44
Delayed union
  • Depending on the individual bone,its
    vascularity, and its biochemical environment,
    fracture healing occurs in 2 to 6 months. failure
    of a fracture to heal in the usual time is called
    delayed union

45
Nonunion
  • Failure to heal 2 to 6 months, with arrest
    of healing process demonstrated by
    radiographically persistent fracture lines,
    sclerosis at the fracture ends, a gap, and
    hypertrophic or no callus, constitutes nonunion.
    Clinically, there may be motion, pain,
    tenderness, and thickening, or deformity at
    fracture site

46
Factors influencing fracture healing
47
The systmic and local factors
  • 1.   age
  • 2.   health status
  • 3.   the types and quantity of
  • fractures
  • 4.   blood supply
  • 5.   the degree of soft tissue injury
  • 6.   interposition of soft tissue
  • 7.   infetion

48
Iatrogenic factors
  • 1.  imperfect reduction
  • 2.  inadequate immoilisation
  • 3.  excessive traction
  • 4.  surgical interference
  • 5. inappropriate rehabilitation

49
Uhthoff proposed a more detailed classification
  • It emphasizes factors under the physicians
    control .His system divides by the injury, depend
    on treatment, or are associated with
    complications

50
Systemic factors
  • A. Age
  • B. Activity level including
  • 1.General immobilization
  • 2.Space flight
  • C. Nutritional status
  • D. Hormonal factors
  • 1.Growth hormone
  • 2.Corticosteroids (microvascular
    avascular necrosis AVN)
  • 3.Others (thyroid, estrogen, androgen,
    calcitonin, parathyroid hormone PTH,
    prostaglandins)

51
  • E.Diseases diabetes, anemia, neuropathies,
  • F.Vitamin deficiencies A, C, D, K
  • G.Drugs nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs
    (NSAIDs), anticoagulants, factor XIII, calcium
    channel blockers
  • H.Other substances (nicotine, alcohol)
  • I.Hyperoxia
  • J.Systemic growth factors
  • K.Environmental temperature
  • L.Central nervous system trauma

52
Local factors A. Factors independent of injury,
treatment, or complications
  • 1.Type of bone
  • 2.Abnormal bone
  • a.Radiation necrosis
  • b.Infection
  • c.Tumors and other pathological
    conditions
  • 3.Denervation

53
B.Factors depending on injury
  • 1.Degree of local damage
  • a.Compound fracture
  • b.Comminution of fracture
  • c.Velocity of injury
  • d.Low circulatory levels of
  • vitamin K1

54
  • 2.Extent of disruption of vascular supply to
    bone, its fragments (macrovascular AVN), or soft
    tissues severity of injury
  • 3.Type and location of fracture (one or two
    bones, e.g., tibia and fibula or tibia alone)
  • 4.Loss of bone
  • 5.Soft tissue interposition
  • 6.Local growth factors

55
C.Factors depending on treatment
  • 1.Extent of surgical trauma (blood supply, heat)
  • 2.Implant-induced altered blood flow
  • 3.Degree and kind of rigidity of internal or
    external fixation and the influence of timing
  • 4.Degree, duration, and direction of load-induced
    deformation of bone and soft tissues

56
  • 5.Extent of contact between fragments (gap,
    displacement, overdistraction)
  • 6.Factors stimulating posttraumatic osteogenesis
    (bone grafts, bone morphogenetic protein BMP,
    electrical stimulation, surgical
    technique, intermittent venous stasis)

57
D.Factors associated with complications
  • 1.Infection
  • 2.Venous stasis
  • 3.Metal allergy

58
Treatment of fracture
  • Our goal is to conserve as much functional
    potential of the injured extremity as possible

59
Priciples of fracture treatment
  • Reduction
  • Immobilization
  • Rehabilitation

60
Reduction
  • Manipulation
  • Traction
  • Open reduction
  • anatomical reduction
  • functional reduction

61
The criteria of functional reduction
  • 1) Alignment of the axis of the bone should be
    corrected in anteroposterior and mediolateral
    planes
  • 2) Length correction is difficult when bone is
    lost, and up to 1 cm of shortening or lengthening
    is well tolerated if it does not compromise
    fracture regeneration biology

62
  • 3) Rotation of the axis of the bone should be
    corrected to be as close as possible to that of
    the normal opposite extremity. Malrotation is
    better tolerated in the upper extremity than in
    the lower extremity .External malrotation seems
    better tolerated than internal malrotation in the
    lower extremity. 5 to 10 degrees of angulatory
    deformation and 10 to 15 degrees of rotary
    deformity may be functionally tolerated.

63
Immobilization
  • splint
  • casting
  • Traction (skin, skeletal)
  • external fixation
  • internal fixation (pin and wire fixation, screw
    fixation, plate and screw fixation,
    intramedullary nail fixation)

64
The indications of open reduction and internal
fixation
  • 1) Major avulsion fractures associated with
    disruption of important musculotendinous units or
    ligamentous groups that have been shown to have a
    poor result with nonoperative treatment
  • 2) Multiple fracture
  • 3) Displaced intraarticular fractures suitable
    for surgical reduction and stabilization

65
  • 4) Unstable fractures in which an appropriate
    trial of nonoperative management has failed
  • 5) Fractures associated with vascular or
    neurological deficits that require surgical
    repair, including long bone fractures in patients
    with spinal cord, conus, or proximal nerve root
    lesions
  • 6) Fractures for which nonoperative treatment is
    known to yield poor functional results, such as
    femoral neck fractures, Galeazzi
    racture-dislocations, and Monteggia
    fracture-dislocations

66
Disadvantages of surgical reduction and
stabilization
  • 1)Operative treatment adds further trauma to any
    injury
  • 2) It increases the dangers of infection and
    further vascular destruction to the injured
    tissues
  • 3) Any surgical dissection will produce scar
    tissue to heal the incision, the dissection in
    itself may create complications of contracture
    and debilitation of the muscle-tendon units

67
  • 4) The possibility of nerve and vascular damage
    is constant
  • 5)  Surgical treatment also involves the use of
    anesthesia and its attendant risks
  • 6) Blood transfusions carry the risks of
    hepatitis, acquired immune deficiency syndrome
    (AIDS), and immunological reactions etc
  • 7) Implants or external fixation systems
    frequently require removal, with the attendant
    risks of a second operative procedure.
    Refractures have been reported after implant and
    external fixation removal.

68
External fixation
  • External fixation with hybrid fixators and frames

69
Screw fixation of articular fragment combined
with external fixation.
70
Internal fixation
  • Examples of screws for fracture fixation
    cancellous and cortical, lag, pretapped and
    self-tapping

71
Lag screw technique
  • A, To determine best location and inclination,
    forceps temporarily compress fracture. B, Lag
    screw replaces forceps in location and position
    (inclination). C, Lag screw is best positioned at
    right angle to fracture plane. Use of bisecting
    angle is correct only for osteotomies with less
    than 40 degrees of inclination. If inclination
    is, for example, 60 degrees, osteotomy will be
    displaced because of insufficient inclination of
    lag screw.

72
Dynamic and static locking of intramedullary
nail
73
Intraarticular epiphyseal and metaphyseal
fractures reconstructed with lag screws
  • A, Cancellous screw (6.4 mm) for posterior lip
    ankle fracture. B, Two 4-mm partially threaded
    small fragment cancellous bone screws used for
    medial malleolar fracture. C, Two 4-mm partially
    threaded small fragment cancellous bone screws
    used for type A fracture of medial malleolus. D,
    Two 4-mm partially threaded small fragment
    cancellous bone screws used for lag screw
    fixation of epiphysis and fixation of condyle to
    metaphysis of distal humerus.

74
Plate is acting as protection plate and
compression plate
75
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76
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77
Open fractures
  • Open fractures are surgical emergencies

78
  • Open fractures are surgical emergencies
  • Surgery should be begun as soon as the patients
    general condition will permit it
  • With the passage of time the probability of
    infection rapidly increases. A contaminated wound
    usually is considered to be infected after 12
    hours

79
The care of the open fracture
  • 1.Treat all open fractures as an emergency
  • 2.Perform a thorough initial evaluation to
    diagnose other life-threatening injuries
  • 3.Begin appropriate antibiotic therapy in the
    emergency room or (at the latest) in the
    operating room and continue the therapy for 2 or
    3 days only

80
  • 4.Immediately debride the wound using copious
    irrigation and, for types II and III fractures,
    repeat the debridement in 24 to 72 hours
  • Debridement is a term that cover the
    following procedure exploration of the wound,
    excision of devitalized tissue, and removal of
    foreign material

81
Assessment of viability of damaged muscle
  • Color, consistency, and the capacity of the
    muscle to bleed can be used as guidelines and
    will assist in determining viability
  • Muscle that is a normal, beefy-red color
    usually is viable. Viable muscle usually is firm
    in consistency, usually will contract when
    incised with a scalpel or touched with
    eletrocautery, and will demonstrate its
    vascularity by punctate bleeding from the cut
    edges

82
  • 5.Stabilize the fracture
  • 6.Leave the wound open for 5 to
  • 7 days
  • 7.Perform early autogenous cancellous bone
    grafting
  • 8.Rehabilitate the involved extremity
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