11 femoral fractures with vascular injury: Good outcome with early vascular repair and internal fixation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3109/17453679608994663Abstract
We reviewed 11 consecutive cases with combined femoral fracture and vascular injury presenting with acute ischemia. 6 cases had ischemia exceeding 8 hours and 4 of them developed massive muscle necrosis in the lower leg. 5 cases with ischemia less than 8 hours had no muscle necrosis. Vascular repair preceded fracture stabilization in 5 cases; there were no vascular complications during the subsequent fracture stabilization. 6 fractures treated with internal fixation had uneventful fracture-healing, whereas the 4 which were treated with external fixation needed later reoperations to obtain fracture-healing. We conclude that the limb must be reperfused within 6-8 hours. Vascular repair should be the first procedure, and fracture fixation by internal fixation is then preferred.Downloads
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Published
1996-01-01
How to Cite
Bråten, M., Helland, P., Myhre, H. O., Mølster, A., & Terjesen, T. (1996). 11 femoral fractures with vascular injury: Good outcome with early vascular repair and internal fixation. Acta Orthopaedica, 67(2), 161–164. https://doi.org/10.3109/17453679608994663
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Acta Orthopaedica (Scandinavica) content is available freely online as from volume 1, 1930. The journal owner owns the copyright for all material published until volume 80, 2009. As of June 2009, the journal has however been published fully Open Access, meaning the authors retain copyright to their work. As of June 2009, articles have been published under CC-BY-NC or CC-BY licenses, unless otherwise specified.
