Publications by authors named "G F Zinghi"

Acetabular fractures.

Chir Organi Mov

September 2004

Over the last few years an increased percentage of work-related and car accidents has led to a higher percentage of acetabular fractures. These injuries are among the most difficult to treat in orthopaedic surgery because of their anatomy and because of the consequent difficulty in surgical exposure. It was the purpose of this study to reveal the diagnostic and the therapeutic paths related to the treatment of these kinds of fractures, based on our experience.

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Acetabular fractures are often associated with dislocation of the proximal femoral epiphysis. The dislocation may be of three types, based on the type of fracture to which it is associated: anterior, central, posterior. In anterior and in central dislocation epiphyseal necrosis of the proximal femur has never been observed, while in posterior dislocation necrosis has been observed in 23% of cases.

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Fractures and diaphyseal nonunion of the femur are normally treated by intramedullary nailing. In cases in which nailing fails, nonunion is treated by reaming of the canal and substitution of the nail with one of a more adequate caliber. Rarely, however, due to unfavorable mechanical conditions or in cases of atrophic nonunion or with scarce vascularization the biological conditions for healing are absent.

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There are specific forms of nonunion secondary to per-inter-subtrochanteric fractures that make surgical planning a critical phase. In cases such as these, it may be useful to transform the center of the nonunion into an osteotomy plane. Because of the anatomotopographical features, course and progression of the lesion, cases such as these constitute a pathology that is difficult to define in terms of a therapeutic protocol.

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A total of 78 cases of aseptic nonunion of the humeral shaft treated at the third division of the Rizzoli Orthopaedic Institute between 1980 and 1997 were evaluated. There was a mean time of 19 months between trauma and definitive treatment. Surgical treatment consisted in osteosynthesis with a plate and bone grafting in 75 cases, and synthesis with screwed bone grafting alone in 3 cases.

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