AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study introduces a method that enhances traditional sliding hip screws (SHS) with cerclage reconstruction plates to treat challenging peritrochanteric fractures and improve implant durability against shearing forces, ultimately aiming to lower the rate of implant failures.
  • - The research involved two patient groups: one receiving the modified SHS (12 patients) and the other the conventional SHS (28 patients), analyzing factors such as surgery duration, blood loss, complications, and long-term outcomes over two years.
  • - Results indicated that while surgery duration was longer for the modified SHS group, overall implant survival rates were comparable between both methods, with factors like subtrochanteric involvement and higher pain scores potentially predicting the need for future revisions

Article Abstract

We proposed a new method to augment the traditional sliding hip screw (SHS) with cerclage reconstruction plates to treat pathologically impending and actual peritrochanteric fractures as well as to revise open reductions and internal fixations to increase the construct strength against the shearing force, thus reducing the implant failure rate. In this retrospective study, patients with peritrochanteric pathology with at least two years of follow-up who underwent augmentation with cerclage reconstruction plates (modified SHS) and conventional SHS between 1 May 2015 and 31 May 2017 were divided into groups A ( = 12) and B ( = 28), respectively. Demographic data, surgery duration, blood loss, complications, and local radiotherapy were analyzed. The average surgery duration was significantly longer in group A ( = 0.013). The estimated intraoperative and perioperative blood losses were not significantly different between the groups. The implant survival rates were not significantly different under competing risk analysis. The success rate of a revision surgery with modified SHS was excellent, and implant survival time was >2 years, as observed with the previous SHS constructs. Subtrochanteric region involvement and a postoperative visual analog scale ≥4 could be risk factors of implant failure and revision surgery. This technique can be an alternative treatment for difficult pathologic peritrochanteric fractures, especially those with previous plating failure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8467161PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm10184271DOI Listing

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