1 / 31

LATE COMPLICATIONS OF FRACTURES

LATE COMPLICATIONS OF FRACTURES. Delayed union Non-union Malunion Joint stiffness Myoisitis ossificans Avascular necrosis Algodystrophy Osteoarthritis. Joint instability Muscle contracture (Volkmann’s contracture) Tendon lesions Nerve compression Growth disturbance Bed sores.

jesusp
Télécharger la présentation

LATE COMPLICATIONS OF FRACTURES

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. LATE COMPLICATIONS OF FRACTURES

  2. Delayed union Non-union Malunion Joint stiffness Myoisitis ossificans Avascular necrosis Algodystrophy Osteoarthritis Joint instability Muscle contracture (Volkmann’s contracture) Tendon lesions Nerve compression Growth disturbance Bed sores LATE COMPLICATIONS

  3. DELAYED UNION • Fracture that has not healed in the expected time for type of fracture, patient and method of repair • Causes • Inadequate blood supply • Severe soft tissue damage • Periosteal stripping • Excessive traction • Insufficient splintage • Infection

  4. PERKINS’ TIME TABLE

  5. Clinical features • Persistent pain at fracture site • Instability at fracture site • Non weight bearing • Disuse muscle atrophy • X-Ray • Visible fracture line • Very little callus formation or periosteal reaction

  6. Treatment • Conservative - To eliminate any possible cause - Immobilization - Exercise • Operative - Indication : Union is delayed > 6 mths No signs of callus formation - Internal fixation & bone grafting

  7. treatment of delayed union fractures • If alignment is adequate implants are stable but motion exists at fracture sites: apply rigid fixation • If alignment is poor: straighten and apply rigid fixation • If reduction is inadequate: treat as nonunion

  8. NON-UNION • Fracture has not healed and is not likely to do so without intervention • Healing has stopped. Fracture gap is filled by fibrous tissue (pseudoarthrosis)

  9. causes of nonunion • Instability at fracture site • inadequate method of stabilization, inadequate postop care • Inadequate blood supply at fracture • Poor surgical technique following open reduction, following trauma at time of frature • Infection • Excessive gap at fracture site • Bone loss, distracting force not counteracted by method of fixation, bone loss from ischemia or infection • Excessive postop use of limb • Use of improper metals or combinations of dissimilar metals • Excessive quantities of implants

  10. Clinical features • Painless movement at the fracture site • No pain at fracture site • Instability at fracture site • May be weight bearing with pseudoarthrosis • X-Ray • Fracture is clearly visible • Fracture ends are rounded, smooth and sclerotic • Atrophic non-union :- Bone looks inactive (Bone ends are often tapered / rounded) - Relatively avascular Hypertrophic non-union : - Excessive bone formation ` - on the side of the gap - Unable to bridge the gap

  11. Hypertrophic non-union Atrophic non-union

  12. treatment of the 2 types of nonunion fractures. • Vascular nonunion • Rigid immobilization • Open reduction and compression of fracture with cancellous bone graft • Avascular nonunion • Surgery required • Open medullary canal, debride sclerotic bone • Apply rigid fixation • Cancellous bone graft

  13. MALUNION • Condition when the fragments join in an unsatisfactory position (unaccepted angulation, rotation or shortening) • Causes • Failure to reduce a fracture adequately • Failure to hold reduction while healing proceeds • Gradual collapse of comminuted or osteoporotic bone.

  14. Clinical features • Deformity & shortening of the limb • Limitation of movements • Treatment • Angulation in a long bone (> 15 degrees) → Osteotomy & internal fixation • Marked rotational deformity → Osteotomy & internal fixation • Shortening (> 3cm) in 1 of the lower limbs → A raised boot OR Bone operation

  15. JOINT STIFFNESS • Common complication of fracture Treatment following immobilization • Common site : knee, elbow, shoulder, small joints of the hand • Causes • Oedema & fibrosis of the capsule, ligaments, muscle around the joint • Adhesion of the soft tissue to each other or to the underlying bone (intra & peri-articular adhesions) • Synovial adhesions d/t haemarthrosis

  16. Treatment • Prevention : - Exercise - If joint has to be splinted → Make sure in correct position • Joint stiffness has occurred: - Prolonged physiotherapy - Intra-articular adhesions → Gentle manipulation under anaesthesia followed by continuous passive motion - Adherent or contracted tissues → Released by operation

  17. MYOSITIS OSSIFICANS • Heterotopic ossification in the muscles after an injury • Usually occurs in • Dislocation of the elbow • A blow to the brachialis / deltoid / quadriceps • Causes • (thought to be due to) muscle damage • Without a local injury (unconscious / paraplegic patient)

  18. Clinical features • Pain, soft tissue tenderness • Local swelling • Joint stiffness • Limitation of movements • Extreme cases: - Bone bridges the joint - Complete loss of movement (extra-articularankylosis) • X-Ray • Normal • Fluffy calcification in the soft tissue

  19. Treatment • Early stage : Joint should be rested • Then : Gentle active movements • When the condition has stabilized : Excision of the bony mass • Anti-inflammatory drugs may ↓ joint stiffness

  20. Circumscribed bone necrosis Causes Interruption of the arterial blood flow Slowing of the venous outflow leading to inadequate perfusion Common site : Femoral head Femoral condyls Humeral head Capitulum of humerus Scaphoid (proximal part) Talus (body) Lunate AVASCULAR NECROSIS

  21. Conditions associated with AVN • Perthes’ disease • Epiphyseal infection • Sickle cell disease • Caisson disease • Gaucher’s disease • Alcohol abuse • High-dosage corticosteroid

  22. Clinical features • Joint pain, stiffness, swelling • Restricted movement • X-Ray • ↑ bone density • Subarticular fracturing • Bone deformity

  23. Treatment • Avoid weight bearing on the necrotic bone • Revascularisation (using vascularised bone grafts) • Excision of the avascular segment • Replacement by prostheses

  24. ALGODYSTROPHY(COMPLEX REGIONAL PAIN SYNDROME) • Previosly known as Sudeck’s atrophy • Post-traumatic reflex sympathetic dystrophy • Usually seen in the foot / hand (after relatively trivial injury) • Clinical features • Continuous, burning pain • Early stage : Local swelling, redness, warmth • Later : Atrophy of the skin, muscles • Movement are grossly restricted

  25. X-Ray • Patchy rarefaction of the bones (patchy osteoporosis) Osteoporosis Algodystrophy

  26. Treatment • Physiotherapy (elevation & active exercises) • Drugs - Anti-inflammatory drugs - Sympathetic block or sympatholytic drugs (Guanethidine)

  27. OSTEOARTHRITIS • Post-traumatic OA • Joint fracture with severely damaged articular cartilage • Within period of months • secondary OA • Cartilage heals • Irregular joint surface may caused localized stress → secondary OA • Years after joint injury

  28. Clinical features Pain Stiffness Swelling Deformity Restricted movement Treatment Pain relief : Analgesics Anti-inflam agent Joint mobility : Physiotherapy Load reduction : wt reduction Realignment osteotomy (young pt) Arthroplasty (pt > 60yr)

  29. Thank You

More Related