LATE COMPLICATIONS OF
FRACTURES
         LATE COMPLICATIONS
•   Delayed union          • Joint instability
•   Non-union              • Muscle contracture
•   Malunion                 (Volkmann’s
•   Joint stiffness          contracture)
•   Myoisitis ossificans   • Tendon lesions
•   Avascular necrosis     • Nerve compression
•   Algodystrophy          • Growth disturbance
•   Osteoarthritis         • Bed sores
          DELAYED UNION
• Fracture that has not healed in the expected
  time for type of fracture, patient and method of
  repair
• Causes
   Inadequate blood supply
   Severe soft tissue damage
   Periosteal stripping
   Excessive traction
   Insufficient splintage
   Infection
            PERKINS’ TIME TABLE
                 Upper Limb   Lower Limb
Callus visible     2-3 wks     2-3 wks
Union              4-6 wks     8-12 wks
Consolidation      6-8 wks    12-16 wks
 Clinical features
Persistent pain at fracture site
Instability at fracture site
Non weight bearing
Disuse muscle atrophy
 X-Ray
    Visible fracture line
    Very little callus formation or
    periosteal reaction
• Treatment
   Conservative
    - To eliminate any possible cause
    - Immobilization
    - Exercise
   Operative
    - Indication :
      Union is delayed > 6 mths
       No signs of callus formation
    - Internal fixation & bone grafting
   treatment of delayed union
           fractures
• If alignment is adequate implants are stable
  but motion exists at fracture sites: apply
  rigid fixation
• If alignment is poor: straighten and apply
  rigid fixation
• If reduction is inadequate: treat as nonunion
                 NON-UNION
• Fracture has not healed and is not likely to do so
  without intervention
• Healing has stopped.
  Fracture gap is filled by fibrous tissue
  (pseudoarthrosis)
          causes of nonunion
• Instability at fracture site
   – inadequate method of stabilization, inadequate postop care
• Inadequate blood supply at fracture
   – Poor surgical technique following open reduction, following
     trauma at time of frature
• Infection
• Excessive gap at fracture site
   – Bone loss, distracting force not counteracted by method of
     fixation, bone loss from ischemia or infection
• Excessive postop use of limb
• Use of improper metals or combinations of dissimilar
  metals
• Excessive quantities of implants
Clinical features
    Painless movement at the fracture site
   No pain at fracture site
   Instability at fracture site
   May be weight bearing with pseudoarthrosis
 X-Ray
    Fracture is clearly visible
   Fracture ends are rounded, smooth and sclerotic
   Atrophic non-union : - Bone looks inactive
                                     (Bone ends are often tapered /
   rounded)
                            - Relatively avascular
      Hypertrophic non-union : - Excessive bone formation
                                      ` - on the side of the gap
                                        - Unable to bridge the gap
Hypertrophic non-   Atrophic non-union
union
   treatment of the 2 types of
       nonunion fractures.
• Vascular nonunion
  – Rigid immobilization
  – Open reduction and compression of fracture with
    cancellous bone graft
• Avascular nonunion
  – Surgery required
  – Open medullary canal, debride sclerotic bone
  – Apply rigid fixation
  – Cancellous bone graft
               MALUNION
• Condition when the fragments join in an
  unsatisfactory position (unaccepted angulation,
  rotation or shortening)
• Causes
   Failure to reduce a fracture adequately
   Failure to hold reduction while healing proceeds
   Gradual collapse of comminuted or osteoporotic
   bone.
• Clinical features
    Deformity & shortening of the limb
    Limitation of movements
 Treatment
    Angulation in a long bone (> 15 degrees)
     → Osteotomy & internal fixation
    Marked rotational deformity
     → Osteotomy & internal fixation
    Shortening (> 3cm) in 1 of the lower limbs
     → A raised boot        OR
        Bone operation
            JOINT STIFFNESS
• Common complication of fracture Treatment
  following immobilization
• Common site : knee, elbow, shoulder,
                  small joints of the hand
• Causes
    Oedema & fibrosis of the capsule, ligaments, muscle
     around the joint
    Adhesion of the soft tissue to each other or to the
     underlying bone (intra & peri-articular adhesions)
    Synovial adhesions d/t haemarthrosis
• Treatment
  Prevention :
     - Exercise
     - If joint has to be splinted → Make sure in correct position
  Joint stiffness has occurred:
     - Prolonged physiotherapy
     - Intra-articular adhesions
       → Gentle manipulation under anaesthesia
           followed by continuous passive motion
     - Adherent or contracted tissues
       → Released by operation
      MYOSITIS OSSIFICANS
• Heterotopic ossification in the muscles after an injury
• Usually occurs in
    Dislocation of the elbow
    A blow to the brachialis / deltoid / quadriceps
 Causes
    (thought to be due to) muscle damage
    Without a local injury (unconscious / paraplegic patient)
• Clinical features
  Pain, soft tissue tenderness
  Local swelling
  Joint stiffness
  Limitation of movements
  Extreme cases: - Bone bridges the joint
                     - Complete loss of movement
                       (extra-articular ankylosis)
 X-Ray
  Normal
  Fluffy calcification in the soft tissue
• Treatment
  Early stage : Joint should be rested
  Then        : Gentle active movements
  When the condition has stabilized :
   Excision of the bony mass
  Anti-inflammatory drugs may ↓ joint stiffness
    AVASCULAR NECROSIS
• Circumscribed bone
  necrosis                         • Common site :
                                      Femoral head
                                      Femoral condyls
• Causes
                                      Humeral head
   Interruption of the arterial
    blood flow                        Capitulum of humerus
   Slowing of the venous             Scaphoid (proximal part)
    outflow leading to                Talus (body)
    inadequate perfusion              Lunate
• Conditions associated with AVN
  Perthes’ disease
  Epiphyseal infection
  Sickle cell disease
  Caisson disease
  Gaucher’s disease
  Alcohol abuse
  High-dosage corticosteroid
• Clinical features
  Joint pain, stiffness, swelling
  Restricted movement
 X-Ray
  ↑ bone density
  Subarticular fracturing
  Bone deformity
• Treatment
  Avoid weight bearing on the necrotic bone
  Revascularisation (using vascularised bone grafts)
  Excision of the avascular segment
  Replacement by prostheses
         ALGODYSTROPHY
(COMPLEX REGIONAL PAIN SYNDROME)
• Previosly known as Sudeck’s atrophy
• Post-traumatic reflex sympathetic dystrophy
• Usually seen in the foot / hand
  (after relatively trivial injury)
• Clinical features
  Continuous, burning pain
  Early stage : Local swelling, redness, warmth
  Later       : Atrophy of the skin, muscles
  Movement are grossly restricted
• X-Ray
  Patchy rarefaction of the bones (patchy osteoporosis)
        Osteoporosis    Algodystrophy
 Treatment
  Physiotherapy (elevation & active exercises)
  Drugs
   - Anti-inflammatory drugs
   - Sympathetic block or sympatholytic drugs
     (Guanethidine)
         OSTEOARTHRITIS
• Post-traumatic OA
  Joint fracture with severely damaged articular
   cartilage
  Within period of months
 secondary OA
  Cartilage heals
  Irregular joint surface may caused localized stress
   → secondary OA
  Years after joint injury
• Clinical features        • Treatment
    Pain                     Pain relief : Analgesics
    Stiffness                               Anti-inflam agent
    Swelling                 Joint mobility : Physiotherapy
    Deformity                Load reduction : wt reduction
    Restricted movement      Realignment osteotomy (young pt)
                              Arthroplasty (pt > 60yr)
Thank You