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Nonunion and Bone Defects

  • A nonunion is an arrest in the fracture repair process
    • progressive evidence of non healing of a fracture of a bone
    • a delayed union is generally defined as a failure to reach bony union by 6 months post-injury
      • this also includes fractures that are taking longer than expected to heal (ie. distal radial fractures)
    • large segmental defects
      • should be considered functional non-unions
  • Pathophysiology
    • multifactorial
      • most commonly, inadequate fracture stabilization and poor blood supply lead to nonunion
      • infection
        • eradication needs to occur along with the achieving fracture union
      • smoking  
      • location
        • scaphoid, distal tibia, base of the 5th metatarsal are at higher risk for nonunion because blood supply in these areas
      • pattern
        • segmental fractures and those with butterfly fragments
        • increased risk of nonunion like because of compromise of the blood supply to the intercalary segment
  • Classification
    • Types of nonunion
      • septic nonunion
        • caused by infection
        • CRP test as the most accurate predictor of infection  
      • pseudoarthrosis
      • hypertrophic nonunion
        • caused by inadequate stability with adequate blood supply and biology  
        • abundant callous formation without bridging bone
        • typically heal once mechanical stability is improved
      • atrophic nonunion
        • caused by inadequate immobilization and inadequate blood supply
      • oligotrophic nonunion
        • produced by inadequate reduction with fracture fragment displacement
  • Presentation
    • Symptoms
      • important to discern injury mechanisms, non operative interventions, baseline metabolic, nutritional or immunologic statuses and use of NSAIDs and/or nicotine containing products
      • assess pain levels with axial loading of involved extremity
    • Physical exam
      • important to complete a thorough neurovascular exam, including the status of the soft tissue envelope
      • assess mobility of the nonunion
      • assess extremity for the presence of deformity
  • Imaging
    • Radiographs
      • plain radiographs are the cornerstone for evaluation of fracture healing; four views should be included
      • full length weight bearing films should obtained if a limb length discrepancy is present
    • CT
      • if the status of union is in question, a CT scan should be obtained; hardware artifact may limit utility of the CT scan
  • Treatment
    • Nonoperative
      • fracture brace immobilization
      • bone stimulators
        • contraindications include synovial pseudoarthroses, nonunions that move and greater than 1 cm between fracture ends
    • Operative
      • infected nonunion
        • often associated with pseudoarthrosis
        • chance of fracture healing is low if the infection isn’t eradicated
        • a staged approach is often important
        • modalities
          • need to remove all infected/devitalized soft tissue
            • use antibiotic beads, and VAC dressings to manage the wound
          • with significant bone loss, bone transport may be an option
          • muscle flaps can be critical in wound management with soft tissue loss
      • pseudoarthrosis
        • may be found in association with infection
        • the joint capsule may be encountered with operative exposure
        • modalities
          • removal of atrophic, non-viable bone ends
          • internal fixation with mechanical stability
          • maintenance of viable soft tissue envelope
      • hypertrophic nonunions
        • often have biologically viable bone ends
        • the issue with fixation, not the biology
        • modalities
          • internal fixation with the application of appropriate mechanical stability
      • oligotrophic nonunions
        • often have biologically viable bone ends
        • may require biological stimulation
        • modalities
          • internal fixation
      • atrophic nonunions
        • often have dysvascular bone ends
        • mobile
        • modalities
          • need to ensure biologically viable bony ends are apposed
          • fixation needs to be mechanically stable
          • bone grafting
            • autologous iliac crest (osteoinductive) is the gold standard
            • BMPs
            • osteoconductive agents (ie. crushed cancellous chips, DBM)
          • establishment of healthy soft tissue flap/envelope

Cases ( Before and After )

Case 1 - Management of large segmental tibial defects using locking IM nail and absorbable mesh

Case 2

Dr. Mohamed Attia

Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon

M.D. PHD

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