Erschienen in:
01.08.2008 | Original Clinical Article
Use of end caps in elastic stable intramedullary nailing of femoral and tibial unstable fractures in children: preliminary results in 11 fractures
verfasst von:
E. Nectoux, M. C. Giacomelli, C. Karger, P. Gicquel, J. M. Clavert
Erschienen in:
Journal of Children's Orthopaedics
|
Ausgabe 4/2008
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Abstract
Background
Elastic stable intramedullary nailing (ESIN) is used routinely world-wide for treating femoral and tibial shaft fractures in children before skeletal maturity. Overall, ESIN allows rapid limb mobilisation with few complications. However, many centres have experienced some complications resulting from secondary fracture displacement, especially in heavy adolescents and in spiroid or complex fractures due to changes in the nail’s position, leading to limb shortening, malrotation and malalignment. End caps were designed by the AO expert group to address these complications.
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficiency, safety and tolerance of this new device in our first series of ten patients and 11 fractures.
Methods
Prospective follow-up of our first ten patients operated on with end caps.
Results
Our results show that there were no serious complications at a mean follow-up of 13.1 months. There was only one 10-mm leg shortening in a patient in whom the end caps could not be properly inserted. There were no infections, no additional pain and no skin irritation. The use of end caps eased the removal of the nails after bone healing, thereby preventing the formation of ossification over the tips of the nails and appeared to protect the skin next to the nail tip.
Conclusion
These results seem to prove the advantage of using end caps when performing ESIN in lower limb shaft fractures in children. A longer follow-up that includes more patients and a randomised prospective study should be carried out in the future to determine more precisely the indications of this new device.