11 femoral fractures with vascular injury: Good outcome with early vascular repair and internal fixation

Authors

  • Martinus Bråten
  • Per Helland
  • Hans O Myhre
  • Anders Mølster
  • Terje Terjesen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/17453679608994663

Abstract

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.

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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