Arthroplasty Today (Feb 2021)

Sister, Sister! Siblings With Simultaneous Early Femoral Insufficiency Fractures After Total Knee Arthroplasty

  • Alberto V. Carli, MD,
  • Ioannis Gkiatas, MD, PhD,
  • Thomas W. Bauer, MD, PhD,
  • Timothy M. Wright, PhD,
  • Fernando Quevedo Gonzalez, PhD,
  • Peter K. Sculco, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
pp. 188 – 193

Abstract

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Early periprosthetic fractures after total knee arthroplasty are rare but devastating complications which require revision surgery and lead to poor patient satisfaction. We present 2 siblings who underwent primary total knee arthroplasty on the same day and then both presented 2 weeks after surgery with atraumatic periprosthetic femur fractures. The first patient underwent revision for a cemented distal femoral replacement with stemmed tibial fixation. The second patient underwent an isolated femoral component revision with a stemmed femoral component and distal augment. Histological evaluation identified significant peri-implant osteoporosis. The variation in complexity associated with early periprosthetic femoral insufficiency fractures is highlighted by these 2 cases. Surgeons may consider using stemmed femoral components in similar patients if poor distal femoral bone stock is encountered intraoperatively.

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