Femoral head fracture: Difference between revisions
Neil.m.young (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "==Diagnosis==" to "==Evaluation==") |
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***Affected leg appears shortened, externally rotated, abducted | ***Affected leg appears shortened, externally rotated, abducted | ||
***Fracture of anterior femoral head; concomitant vascular injury | ***Fracture of anterior femoral head; concomitant vascular injury | ||
*Associated Conditions: | |||
**[[Femoral neck fracture]] | |||
**acetabular fracture | |||
**sciatic nerve neuropraxia | |||
**ipsilateral knee ligamentous instability | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
Revision as of 14:09, 8 August 2017
Background
Clinical Features
- Results from high-energy trauma (e.g. dashboard to flexed knee)
- Can occur with dislocation:
- Posterior dislocation
- Affected leg appears shortened, internally rotated, adducted
- Fracture of inf aspect of femoral head; concomitant sciatic nerve injury
- Anterior dislocation
- Affected leg appears shortened, externally rotated, abducted
- Fracture of anterior femoral head; concomitant vascular injury
- Posterior dislocation
- Associated Conditions:
- Femoral neck fracture
- acetabular fracture
- sciatic nerve neuropraxia
- ipsilateral knee ligamentous instability
Differential Diagnosis
Femur Fracture Types
Proximal
- Intracapsular
- Extracapsular
Shaft
- Mid-shaft femur fracture (all subtrochanteric)
Evaluation
- Consider AP pelvis in addition to AP/lateral views to compare contralateral side
- Consider MRI if strong clinical suspicion but negative x-ray
Management
- Immediate ortho consult
- Emergent closed reduction of dislocation
Disposition
- Admit
