Objective: To explore the risk factors of osteonecrosis of femoral head after internal fixation of femoral neck fracture in young patients, to describe the quality of life of patients with surviving femoral head, and to quantify the predictive factors.

Methods: From January 2013 to December 2016, 172 patients (174 hips) with femoral neck fracture treated by closed reduction and cannulated screw internal fixation were selected for retrospective analysis. The general data of the patients were summarized, including age, gender, body mass index, trauma mechanism, trauma operation interval, trauma season and whether the internal fixation was removed. The imaging data included the Garden classification and Pauwel classification of fractures, femoral head retroversion angle, postoperative fracture reduction, screw distribution. Single factor analysis and multi-factor Logistic regression analysis were carried out to explore the risk factors of femoral head necrosis and internal fixation failure. The patients who survived the internal fixation were followed up. The quality of life of the patients was evaluated by the health survey of SF-36. The Harris score of hip joint function was used to evaluate the hip joint function. The predictors of the quality of life of the patients after the operation of femoral neck fracture were analyzed by multiple linear regression analysis.

Results: Total 172 patients(174 hips) were included in the study, 29 patients(16.67%) had necrosis of the femoral head. In multivariate Logistic regression analysis, the significant differences were reduction quality (=0.126, =0.027) and posterior inclination angle (=4.380, =0.010). One hundred and thirty six patients (137 hips) who survived the femoral head were included in the quality of life survey. Harris score was 90.14±7.92, including excellent 96 hips (70.07%), good 28 hips (20.44%), medium 13 hips (9.49%) and poor 0 hip. In SF-36 score, physical health summary (PCS) was 46.12±9.12, mental health summary(MCS) was 50.21±3.97, there was no linear correlation between them (>0.05). In multiple linear regression analysis, the variables with significant difference in PCS were reduction quality and retroversion angle, and the variables with significant difference in MCS were fracture displacement and trauma mechanism.

Conclusion: Poor reduction quality and posterior inclination angle>15° are the risk factors of femoral head necrosis. The function of hip joint and MCS of patients with femoral neck fracture recovered well, but PCS could not recover to the average level of normal people. The reduction quality and retroversion angle could be used as the predictors of PCS, and the displacement and trauma mechanism of fracture could be used as the predictors of MCS.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.12200/j.issn.1003-0034.2020.08.013DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

femoral head
32
internal fixation
24
quality life
20
femoral neck
20
neck fracture
16
reduction quality
16
femoral
13
risk factors
12
life patients
12
retroversion angle
12

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!