1 / 67

Patella Fractures & Extensor Mechanism Injuries

Patella Fractures & Extensor Mechanism Injuries. Lisa K. Cannada, MD Revised: October 2008; May 2011. Anatomy. • Largest sesamoid bone • Thick articular cartilage proximally • Articular surface divided into medial and lateral facets by longitudinal ridge • Distal pole

gmcadory
Télécharger la présentation

Patella Fractures & Extensor Mechanism Injuries

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Patella Fractures & Extensor Mechanism Injuries Lisa K. Cannada, MD Revised: October 2008; May 2011

  2. Anatomy • Largest sesamoid bone • Thick articular cartilage proximally • Articular surface divided into medial and lateral facets by longitudinal ridge • Distal pole nonarticular

  3. Anatomy • Patellar Retinaculum – Longitudinal tendinous fibers – Patellofemoral ligaments • Blood Supply – Primarily derived from geniculate arteries

  4. Biomechanics • The patella undergoes approximately 7 cm of translation from full flexion to extension • Only 13-38% of the patellar surface is in contact with the femur throughout its range of motion

  5. Biomechanics • The patella increases the moment arm about the knee – Contributes up to 30% improvement in lever arm • Patella withstands compressive forces greater than 7X body weight with squatting

  6. Biomechanics • 2 X Torque: – Extend final 15° – Than to extend from a fully flexed position to 15 degrees of flexion

  7. Physical Examination • Pain, swelling, contusions, lacerations and/or abrasions at the site of injury – Can determine timing of operative intervention • Palpable defect • Assessment of ability to extend the knee – Cannot perform a straight leg raise with no extensor lag

  8. Radiographic Evaluation • AP & Lateral – Note patella height (baja or alta) – Note fracture pattern • Articular step-off, diastasis • Marginal impaction • Special views – Axial or sunrise • CT Scan - Occult Fractures - Complex or Marginal Impaction Fractures

  9. Radiographic Evaluation • Bipartite Patella: • Don’t get fooled! – Obtain bilateral views – Often superolateral corner (Saupe Classification, 1923) – Accessory ossification center – Occurs 1-2% of patients

  10. Etiology • Direct trauma – Direct blow to flexed knee (dashboard) – Increasing cases with penetrating trauma – Comminution & articular marginal impaction • Indirect trauma – Flexion force directed through the extensor mechanism against a contracted quadriceps – Simple, transverse fracture

  11. Classification • Allows guidance with treatment • Types – Transverse – Marginal – Vertical – Comminuted – Osteochondral – Avulsion (not pictured) Tip: Vertical fractures may not result in disruption of extensor mechanism

  12. OA/OTA Classification

  13. Nonoperative Treatment • Indicated for minimally or nondisplaced fractures – < 2mm of articular step-off & < 3mm of diastasis with an intact extensor mechanism (extensor retinaculum) – If difficulty assessing, consider intra-articular injection of local anesthetic to better assess ability to extend • Consider for minimally displaced fractures in low demand patients (evaluate comorbidities & function) • Patients with a extensive medical comorbidities

  14. Nonoperative Treatment • Long leg cylinder cast for 4-6 weeks – May consider a knee immobilizer or hinged knee brace for the elderly/low demand • Immediate weight-bearing as tolerated • Rehabilitation includes range of motion exercises with gradual quadriceps strengthening • Protect eccentric contraction 3 months

  15. Operative Treatment • Goals – Preserve extensor function – Restore articular congruency • Preoperative Setup – Tourniquet (debatable) • Prior to inflation, gently flex the knee • Approach – Longitudinal midline incision recommended – Transverse approach alternative (dotted lines) – potentially higher risk wound problems, can limit initiation of ROM – Consider future surgeries!

  16. Procedure Longitudinal Incision Clean Fracture Site Torn Retinaculum

  17. Procedure Reduce & Compress Fracture

  18. Operative Techniques • K-wires w/ tension band wiring (TBW) • Lag-screw fixation • Cannulated lag-screw with TBW (tension band screw – TBS) • Partial patellectomy • Total Patellectomy

  19. Tension Band Wiring • Transverse, non-comminuted fractures • Reduce and clamp, then place two parallel 1.6mm K- wires placed perpendicular to the fracture • 18 gauge wire passed behind proximally and distally • Double Figure-8 wire for equal compression

  20. Tension Band Wiring • Wire converts anterior distractive forces to compressive forces at the articular surface • Two twists are placed on opposite sides of the wire – Tighten simultaneously to achieve symmetric tension • Retinacular Injury – Keep open until the end – Window to assess articular reduction – Repair the retinacular injury last

  21. Lag-Screw Fixation • Indicated for stabilization of comminuted fragments in conjunction w/ cerclage wires if necessary • May also be used as an alternative/adjunct to TBW for transverse or vertical fractures

  22. Example

  23. Example

  24. Lag-Screw Fixation • Contraindicated for extensive comminution and osteopenic bone • Small secondary fractures may be stabilized with 2.0mm, 2.7mm or 3.5mm cortical screws • Reduce out of plane fragments to main fragments superiorly and inferiorly • Transverse or vertical fractures require 3.5mm, 4.0mm, or 4.5mm cortical screws – Retrograde insertion of screws may be technically easier

  25. Cannulated Lag-Screw With Tension Band (TBS) • Partially threaded cannulated screws (4.0mm) • Wire through screws and across anterior patella in figure of eight tension band • Make sure tip of screw remains buried in bone so it will not compromise wire

  26. Cannulated Lag-Screw With Tension Band • More stable construct – Screws and tension band wire combination eliminates both possible separation seen at the fracture site with K wire/TBW and screw failure due to excessive three point bending

  27. Suture vs. Wire Tension Band Patel et al, Injury 2000 McGreal et al, J Med Eng Tech, 1999 • Cadaveric models • Quality and stability of fixation comparable to wire • Conclude suture an acceptable alternative Gosal et al Injury 2001 • Wire v. #5 Ethibond • 37 patients • Reoperation 38% wire group vs. 6% • Infection 3 pts wire group vs. 0

  28. Partial Patellectomy • Indicated for fractures involving extensive comminution not amenable to fixation • Larger fragments repaired with screws to preserve maximum cartilage • Smaller fragments excised – Usually involving the distal pole

  29. Partial Patellectomy • Tendon is attached to fragment with nonabsorbable suture passed through drill holes in the fragment – Drill holes should be near the articular surface to prevent tilting of the patella • Load sharing wire passed through drill holes in the tibial tubercle and patella may be used to protect the repair and facilitate early range of motion

  30. Total Patellectomy • Indicated for displaced, comminuted fractures not amenable to reconstruction • Bone fragments sharply dissected • Defect may be repaired through a variety of techniques • Usually results in extensor lag (30°) and loss of strength (30%) – H Kaufer, JBJS

  31. Postoperative Management • Immobilization with knee brace, WBAT in extension • Early range of motion – Based on intraoperative assessment of repair & bone quality – Active flexion with passive extension • Quadriceps strengthening – Begin when there is radiographic evidence of healing, usually around 6 weeks • Modify depending upon fracture, osteoporosis, comorbidities, tenuous fixation and/or wounds at risk

  32. Complications • Knee Stiffness – Most common complication • Infection – Rare, depends on soft tissue compromise • Loss of Fixation – Hardware failure in up to 20% of cases • Osteoarthritis – May result from articular damage or incongruity • Nonunion < 1% with surgical repair • Painful hardware – Removal required in approximately 15%

  33. Nonunion

  34. Loss of Fixation

  35. Malunion

  36. Extensor Tendon Ruptures • Patients are typically males in their 30’s or 40’s – Patellar < 40 yo – Quadriceps > 40 yo • Mechanism – Fall – Sports “The weekend warrior” – MVA – Tendonopathies, Steroids, Renal Dialysis

  37. Quadriceps Tendon Rupture • Typically occurs in patients > 40 years old • Usually 0-2 cm above the superior pole • Level often associated with age – Rupture occurs at the bone-tendon junction in majority of patients > 40 years old – Rupture occurs at midsubstance in majority of patients < 40 years old

  38. Quadriceps Tendon Ruptures • Risk Factors – Chronic tendonitis – Anabolic steroid use – Local steroid injection – Inflammatory arthropathy – Chronic renal failure – Systemic disease

  39. History • Sensation of a sudden pop while stressing the extensor mechanism (eccentric load) • Pain at the site of injury • Inability to extend the knee • Difficulty weight-bearing

  40. Physical Exam • Effusion • Tenderness at the upper pole • Palpable defect above superior pole • Loss of extension • With partial tears, extension will be intact

  41. Quadriceps Tendon Rupture Radiographic Evaluation • X-ray- AP, Lateral, and Tangential (Sunrise, Merchant) – Distal displacement of the patella (patella baja) • MRI – Useful when diagnosis is unclear Treatment • Nonoperative – Partial tears and strains • Operative – For complete ruptures

  42. Operative Treatment • Reapproximation of tendon to bone using nonabsorbable sutures with tears at the muscle-tendon junction – Locking stitch (Bunnel, Krakow) with No. 5 ethibond passed through vertical bone tunnels – Repair tendon close to articular surface to avoid abnormal patellar tilting

  43. Operative Treatment • Midsubstance tears may undergo end-to-end repair after edges are freshened and slightly overlapped – May benefit from reinforcement from distally based partial thickness quadriceps tendon turned down across the repair site (Scuderi Technique)

  44. Treatment • Chronic tears may require a V-Y advancement of a retracted quadriceps tendon (Codivilla V- Y-plasty Technique)

  45. Postoperative Management • Knee immobilizer, Hinged Knee Brace, or cylinder cast for 5-6 weeks • Immediate weight-bearing as tolerated • At 2-3 weeks, hinged knee brace starting with 45 degrees active range of motion with 10-15 degrees of progression each week

  46. Complications • Rerupture • Persistent quadriceps atrophy/weakness • Loss of motion • Infection

  47. Patellar Tendon Rupture • Less common than quadriceps tendon rupture • Associated with degenerative changes of the tendon • Rupture often occurs at inferior pole insertion site

  48. Patellar Tendon Rupture • Risk Factors – Rheumatoid arthritis – Systemic Lupus Erythematosus – Diabetes – Chronic Renal Failure – Systemic Corticosteroid Therapy – Local Steroid Injection – Chronic tendonitis

  49. Anatomy • Patellar tendon – Averages 4 mm thick but widens to 5-6 mm at the tibial tubercle insertion – Merges with the medial and lateral retinaculum – 90% type I collagen

  50. Blood Supply • Fat pad vessels supply posterior aspect of tendon via inferior medial and lateral geniculate arteries • Retinacular vessels supply anterior portion of tendon via the inferior medial geniculate and recurrent tibial arteries • Proximal and distal insertion areas are relatively avascular and subsequently are a common site of rupture

More Related