Purpose: This study was conducted to assess a stepwise surgical procedure applied to treat a continuous series of patients with aseptic atrophic nonunion of long bones.
Methods: A retrospective review was performed of the medical files of patients treated by the senior author between January 2014 and January 2021 for aseptic atrophic nonunion of long bones using a standard stepwise surgical procedure consisting of four successive surgical steps: bridge locked plating, aggressive osteoperiosteal decortication, copious autologous iliac bone grafting, and tight closure without drainage. Patients were clinically and radiographically evaluated until bone healing, then at final follow-up for the purpose of the study.
Background: Hip pain during pregnancy is very common, but hip avascular necrosis represents a very rare entity.
Case Report: We report a rare case of a healthy30-year-old female patient pregnant with twins, that suffered right hip avascular necrosis in the peripartum period, her symptoms were initially neglected as a benign cause of hip pain, this led to aggressive treatment at a young age.
Discussion: With less than 100 cases reported in the literature, pregnancy is not a well-known risk factor for femoral head avascular necrosis and it should be differentiated from one of the more common hip pathologies in pregnancy which is the so-called "Pelvic pain syndrome" and transient osteoporosis of the hip.