Complication of Fracture
Complication of Fracture
Complication of Fracture
FRACTURES
FRACTURE
a) ‘Greenstick’ fracture
b) Displaced transverse fracture
c) Oblique fracture
d) Spiral fracture
e) Segmental fracture
f) Compression fracture
g) Avulsion fracture
CLASSIFICATION OF FRACTURES
• Complete fractures
• Incomplete fractures
• Physeal fractures
COMPLETE FRACTURES
• After complete fracture, the fragments usually become displaced, partly by the force of
injury, partly by gravity, partly by pull of muscles attached to them.
• Displacement usually described in terms of:
a. Translation (shift) - sideways, backwards, forwards
b. Alignment (angulation)
c. Rotation (twist)
d. Length- shortening of the bone
FRACTURE HEALING
• 2 methods:
- With callus
- Without callus
* Varies according to the type of bone involved and amount of movement at the fracture
site
HEALING WITH CALLUS
• Identification data :
- Name, Age , Sex, Occupation, Address, Date of admission
• History of Presenting Illness :
- What : mechanism of injury & force involved
- When : timing of fracture
- Where : situation of injury
- Why : circumstances of fracture (if due to fall, include before/during/after
fall history)
• Always enquire about symptoms of associated injuries :
- Pain?
- Swelling?
- Deformity?
- Movement restriction?
- Any locking, giving way?
- Any weakness, numbness, paresthesia?
- Skin pallor or cyanosis?
- Blood in the urine ?
- Breathing difficulties?
- Transient loss of consciousness?
• Past Medical & Surgical History
- Ask about any previous injuries/accidents?
- Any previous surgical intervention had done?
- Any co- morbidities? ( eg: epilepsy, dementia, Parkinsonism)
- A general medical history in preparation for anaesthesia or operation
• Social History
-Occupation : will the injury likely impact employment?
-Any hobbies likely to be impacted by injury?
-Which hand is dominant?
-Smoking/ alcohol intake/ recreational use
- Adequate financial support?
-How will independent living be impacted by injury and rehabilitation?
• Drug History
- in particular, any anticoagulants, steroids (osteopenia)
- any allergies
CLINICAL EXAMINATION
MOVE : 1) Crepitus
2) Abnormal movement
3) Ask if the patient can move the joints distal to injury
- Vascular and peripheral nerve abnormalities should be tested for both before and after
treatment
IMAGING
• Joint involvement
EARLY LATE
• Visceral injury • Unification ( delayed, non, mal )
• Vascular injury • Avascular necrosis
• Nerve injury • Growth disturbance
• Compartment syndrome • Bed sores
• Haemarthrosis • Myositis ossificans
• Infection • Tendon lesions
• Gas gangrene • Nerve compression
• Fracture blisters • Muscle contracture
• Plasters and pressure sores • Joint (instability, stiffness)
• Complex regional pain syndrome
• Osteoarthritis
EARLY COMPLICATION
VISCERAL INJURY
INJURY VESSELS
First rib fracture Subclavian
Shoulder dislocation Axillary
Humeral supracondylar fracture Brachial
Elbow dislocation Brachial
Pelvic fracture Presacral and internal iliac
Femoral supracondylar fracture Femoral
Knee dislocation Popliteal
Proximal tibial Popliteal and its branches
NERVE INJURY
• CLOSED
• Seldom severed and spontaneous recovery (90% in 4months)
• If not recover within expected time, and nerve conduction studies + EMG fail -> do
exploration
• OPEN
• Complete nerve injury, nerve should be explored during debridement and repaired
INJURY NERVE
• High risk injury : elbow, forearm bones, procimal third of the tibia, multiple fractures
of the hand or foot, crush injuries, cicumferential burns, internal fixation operation
and infections
• Classic features of ischemia (5P)
1. Pain
2. Paraesthesia
3. Pallor
4. Paralysis
5. Pulselessness
• Ischemic muscle is highly sensitive to stretch
• Conformation diagnosis : intracompartmental pressure (ΔP<30mmHg)
TREATMENT
• Stage 1: Soft tissue swelling – This is characterized by swelling secondary to direct bleeding, both into the joint and into the
adjacent tissues.
• Stage 2: Osteoporosis – The second stage is characterized by the development of osteoporosis and/or epithelial overgrowth
secondary to inflammatory hyperemia, especially marked in the knee and elbow.
• Stage 3: Osseous lesions – The third stage is characterized by disorganization of the joint with overgrowth of the epiphysis,
squaring of the patella, and widening of the articular notch of the knee and the trochlea of the ulna; the articular cartilage
remains intact.
• Stage 4: Cartilage destruction – The fourth stage is characterized by destruction and secondary joint space narrowing.
• Stage 5: Joint disorganization – The fifth stage is due to chronic disease that leads to complete loss of cartilage spaces, and
considerable bony erosion and irregularity.
GAS GANGRENE
• Anaerobic organisms that can survive and multiply in tissue with low O2
tension Dirty wound with dead muscle that closed without adequate
debridement
• Toxin produced by the organism lead to tissue necrosis and distribution
of O2 to the body
• Complains of intense pain and swelling around the wound and a
brownish discharge may be seen
• Characteristic smell becomes evident
TREATMENT
• Hyperbaric oxygen
• Prompt decompression of wound and
removal of all dead tissues
• Amputation may be essential
FRACTURE BLISTERS
• Types
• Clear fluid filled vesicles
• Blood stained
OSTEOMYELITIS
→ internal fixation
and bone grafting
Complications Types Causes Treatment
Bone or joint deformity results in local nerve entrapmet with typical features
- Numbness
- Paraesthesia
- Loss of power
- Muscle wasting
Common sites
- Ulnar nerve - malunited lateral condyle or supracondylar fracture
- Median nerve – injuries around wrist
- Posterior tibial nerve – fracture around ankle
Treatment
- Early decompression of the nerve
7. AVASCULAR NECROSIS
DESCRIPTION CLINICAL IMAGING MANAGEMENT
FEATURES
• Also known as • Pain in or near joint • X-ray -Increase bone • old people -
osteonecrosis (normally only density Arthroplasty
• Bone does not during certain • MRI- band like low • young people-
receive adequate movement) intensity signal on Realigment
blood supply • Click in the joint T1-weighted SE osteotomy /
• Head of femur • Swelling image arthodesis
• Proximal part of • Movement restricted • Vascularised bone
scaphoid grafting
• Lunate
• Body of talus
8. MYOSITIS OSSIFICANS
DESCRIPTION CLINICAL IMAGING MANAGEMENT
FEATURES
• Heterotopic • Pain • After injury X-ray • Joint rested in
ossifications in • Local swelling normal position of function
muscles • Soft-tissue • After 2-3 weeks until pain subside
• Dislocation of elbow, tenderness fluffy calcification in • After pain subside,
blow to brachialis, • Over 2-3 weeks pain soft tissue gentle active
deltoid or subside but joint • 8 weeks- defined movement
quadriceps movement limited bony mass • Excise bony mass
• Due to muscle • By 8 wekks bony • Indomethacin and
damge mass easily palpable radiotheraphy given
• Also occur without to prevent
local injury in recurrence.
unconscious or
paraplegic patient
9. JOINT STIFFNESS
DESCRIPTION CLINICAL FEATURE MANAGEMENT
• Knee, elbow,shoulder • Tenderness • Exercise to keep joint
and small joints of hand • Progressive stiffness of mobile
• Joint itself injured distal joints • If intraarticular
haemarthrosis adhesion then gentle
formation manipulation through
synovial adhesion anesthesia can free the
• Oedema and fibrosis of joint
capsule,ligaments and
muscle around joint
10. MUSCLE CONTRACTURE
DESCRIPTION CLINICAL MANAGEMENT
FEATURES
• following arterial • Wasting of arm • Pedicle nerve
injury or and forearm graft- using
compartment • Clawing of proximal
syndrome fingers segment of
• ischamic • Loss of sensation median and ulnar
contracture of • Loss of function nerve
affected muscle • Bunnells intrinsic • Tendon release
(Volkmann’s plus position and transfer
ischaemic • Claw-toe
contracture) deformity
• Forearm, hand,
leg, foot
11. JOINT INSTABILITY