Intertrochanteric femur fracture: Difference between revisions
Neil.m.young (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "==Diagnosis==" to "==Evaluation==") |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
* | {{General Fracture Management}} | ||
===Specific Management=== | |||
*Ortho consult | |||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
*Admit | *Admit | ||
===Specialty Care=== | |||
*Typically requires ORIF | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
Revision as of 05:43, 18 September 2019
Background
- Occur via fall in elderly or osteoporotic
Clinical Features
- Typically pain, swelling, ecchymosis
- May lose 1-2L of blood
- Unable to bear weight
- Shortening and external rotation if fracture is significantly displaced
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
Evaluation
- Stable (Garden's type I and II)
- Lesser trochanter non-displaced, no comminution, medial cortices of prox/distal fragments aligned
- Unstable (Garden's type III and IV)
- Displacement occurs, comminution is present, or multiple fracture lines exist
Management
General Fracture Management
- Acute pain management
- Open fractures require immediate IV antibiotics and urgent surgical washout
- Neurovascular compromise from fracture requires emergent reduction and/or orthopedic intervention
- Consider risk for compartment syndrome
Specific Management
- Ortho consult
Disposition
- Admit
Specialty Care
- Typically requires ORIF

