RECURRENT ROTATIONAL DEFORMITY OF THE FEMUR AFTER STATIC LOCKING OF INTRAMEDULLARY NAILS CASE REPORTS

Rotational deformity following intramedullary nailing may cause symptoms and require surgical correction by osteotomy. Reamed, locked intramedullary nailing may be performed, but concern about cortical blood supply and potential pulmonary dysfunction from reaming have led many surgeons to limit this...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of bone and joint surgery. British volume Vol. 79-B; no. 1; pp. 4 - 8
Main Authors Krettek, C., Miclau, T., Blauth, M., Lindsey, R. W., Donow, C., Tscherne, H.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.01.1997
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Summary:Rotational deformity following intramedullary nailing may cause symptoms and require surgical correction by osteotomy. Reamed, locked intramedullary nailing may be performed, but concern about cortical blood supply and potential pulmonary dysfunction from reaming have led many surgeons to limit this and use smaller diameter nails. Slotted nails are commonly used but are less stiff in torsion than the newer unslotted nails, particularly at the lower diameters. We report two cased of recurrent femoral rotational deformity after using statically interlocked slotted intramedullary nails to correct existing femoral rotational deformities. These patients show that small diameter statically interlocked femoral nails with diminished bone-nail contact must be stiff enough in rotation to avoid potential recurrence.
ISSN:0301-620X
2044-5377
DOI:10.1302/0301-620X.79B1.0790004