Femoral shaft fractures in childrenElastic stable intramedullary nailing in 31 cases

Authors

  • Shirzad Houshian
  • Charlotte Buch Gøthgen
  • Niels Wisbech Pedersen
  • Søren Harving

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/00016470410001150

Abstract

We report our experience with elastic stable intramedullary titanium nailing (ESIN) of femoral shaft fractures in children. From 1998 to 2001, we treated 31 children (20 boys), median age 6 (4–11) years, with ESIN for 29 closed and 2 grade I open femoral shaft fractures. We reviewed 30 children clinically after median 1.5 (1–3) years. Their median hospital stay was 6 (2–20) days. All fractures were radiographically united at a median of 7 (5–9) weeks. The nails were removed in 29 children after a median of 22 (6–38) weeks postoperatively. At follow-up, we found a leg-length discrepancy up to 1 cm in 6 children and 10 degrees of internal rotational deformity in 1 child. No angular deformity had occurred. Elastic stable intramedullary nailing seems to be a safe method for the treatment of femoral shaft fractures in children between 4 and 11 years of age.

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Published

2004-01-01

How to Cite

Houshian, S., Gøthgen, C. B., Pedersen, N. W., & Harving, S. (2004). Femoral shaft fractures in childrenElastic stable intramedullary nailing in 31 cases. Acta Orthopaedica, 75(3), 249–251. https://doi.org/10.1080/00016470410001150