Principles of Fracture Management

Principles of Fracture Management

Principles of Fracture Management

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Fracture Fundamentals - Bone Break Basics

  • Fracture: A break in the continuity of bone.
  • Key Descriptors:
    • Etiology: Traumatic, Pathological (e.g., tumor, osteoporosis), Stress.
    • Skin Integrity: Open (communicates with exterior) vs. Closed.
    • Displacement: Angulation, Rotation, Translation (Shift), Shortening.
    • Pattern: Transverse, Linear, Oblique (non/displaced), Spiral, Greenstick, Torus, Comminuted (>2 fragments). Types of Bone Fractures Diagram

⭐ Gustilo-Anderson classification is vital for open fractures: Type I (<1 cm, clean), Type II (>1 cm, no extensive soft tissue damage, flaps, or avulsions), Type III (extensive soft tissue damage; A,B,C subtypes based on severity and vascular injury).

Healing & Diagnosis - Mend & Find

  • Fracture Healing Stages:
    • Inflammation/Hematoma (Day 1-7): Cytokines, growth factors.
    • Soft Callus (Week 2-3): Fibrocartilage bridges gap. Stability ↑.
    • Hard Callus (Week 3-12): Woven bone. Clinical union. X-ray visible.
    • Remodeling (Months-Years): Lamellar bone. Strength ↑, shape restored.
  • Diagnosis:
    • Clinical: Pain, deformity, swelling, crepitus, abnormal movement, loss of function. (Inspect, Palpate, Move).
    • Radiological: X-ray (📌 Rule of 2s: 2 views, 2 joints, 2 occasions if occult). CT (complex/articular), MRI (soft tissue/occult).

⭐ Wolff's Law: Bone adapts to loads; remodels based on stress. oka

Management Goals & Non-Op - Fix It Right

  • Goals: Relieve pain, achieve bone union in acceptable position, restore optimal function, prevent complications. 📌 Principles: Reduce, Retain, Rehabilitate.
  • Non-Operative Methods ("Fix It Right"):
    • Closed Reduction: Manual manipulation; Traction (skin/skeletal).
    • Immobilization (Retention):
      • Casts (POP/Synthetic): Immobilize joint above & below.
      • Splints/Slabs: Acute swelling; temporary.
      • Functional Braces: Allow joint motion (e.g., Sarmiento for humerus).
      • Traction: Definitive for some (e.g., pediatric femur).

⭐ The three-point principle of cast application is crucial for effective immobilization, counteracting deforming forces.

Surgical Strats - Knife & Metal

  • Indications for Surgery:
    • Open fractures
    • Displaced intra-articular fractures
    • Failure of conservative management
    • Multiple fractures (polytrauma)
    • Pathological fractures
    • Unstable fractures
    • Neurovascular compromise
  • Surgical Options:
    • Open Reduction & Internal Fixation (ORIF): Plates, screws
      • Articular fractures, complex patterns
    • Intramedullary (IM) Nailing: Rods
      • Long bone diaphyseal fractures (femur, tibia)
    • External Fixation (Ex-Fix): Pins & bars
      • Open fractures with severe soft tissue damage, pelvic fractures, damage control orthopaedics

AO Principles (Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Osteosynthesefragen):

  1. Anatomic reduction of fracture fragments.
  2. Stable internal fixation.
  3. Preservation of blood supply to bone & soft tissues.
  4. Early, active, pain-free mobilization of muscles & joints adjacent to the fracture.
  • Complications: Infection, non-union, malunion, implant failure, neurovascular injury.

Complications & Concerns - Trouble Ahead

  • Systemic:
    • Shock (Hemorrhagic)
    • Fat Embolism Syndrome (FES): Respiratory distress, petechiae, CNS signs. Gurd's criteria.
    • DVT/PE: Virchow's triad.
  • Local - Early:
    • Neurovascular Injury: Check distal pulse, sensation, motor.
    • Compartment Syndrome: ⚠️ Pain out of proportion, 6 P's. Pressure >30-40 mmHg. Fasciotomy.
    • Infection: Superficial, deep, osteomyelitis.
  • Local - Late:
    • Delayed Union / Non-union: (Hypertrophic 'elephant foot', Atrophic 'pencil point').
    • Malunion: Deformity.
    • Avascular Necrosis (AVN): Scaphoid, femoral head.
    • Stiffness & Contractures: e.g., Volkmann's Ischemic Contracture.
    • Post-traumatic Osteoarthritis.
    • CRPS (Complex Regional Pain Syndrome).

⭐ Volkmann's Ischemic Contracture, a claw-like deformity, is a dreaded sequela of untreated compartment syndrome, especially in supracondylar humerus fractures.

Volkmann's Ischemic Contracture clinical presentation

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • ATLS protocol is paramount in polytrauma before fracture management.
  • Reduction: Aim for anatomic alignment; closed methods preferred.
  • Immobilization: Prevents movement, aids union (cast, splint, traction, fixation).
  • Open Fractures: Require emergency debridement, IV antibiotics (Gustilo-Anderson).
  • Compartment Syndrome: Clinical diagnosis (5 Ps); urgent fasciotomy is crucial.
  • Nonunion risks: infection, poor blood supply, instability, smoking.
  • Rehabilitation: Essential for restoring function and preventing stiffness.

Practice Questions: Principles of Fracture Management

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X-ray showing compression on one side of the radius causing the other side to bend/ buckle suggests a _____ fracture.

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X-ray showing compression on one side of the radius causing the other side to bend/ buckle suggests a _____ fracture.

torus

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