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Full-Length Radiographs Of The Femur In Patients With A Femoral Neck Fracture and Co-Existent Malignancy- Are They Of Benefit?
It is recommended that full-length femoral radiographs should be obtained in patients presenting with a femoral neck fracture and a co-existent history of malignancy. Over a two-year period, we identified 133 (47 males, 86 females) patients admitted with a femoral neck fracture and a co-existent his...
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
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The Ulster Medical Society
2008
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2604475/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18956800 |
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author | O'Flaherty, Maurice T Thompson, Neville W Ellis, Peter K Barr, R John |
author_facet | O'Flaherty, Maurice T Thompson, Neville W Ellis, Peter K Barr, R John |
author_sort | O'Flaherty, Maurice T |
collection | PubMed |
description | It is recommended that full-length femoral radiographs should be obtained in patients presenting with a femoral neck fracture and a co-existent history of malignancy. Over a two-year period, we identified 133 (47 males, 86 females) patients admitted with a femoral neck fracture and a co-existent history of malignant disease, representing 6.5% of all femoral neck fractures admitted within this time frame. None of the patients had previously diagnosed bone metastases. The mean patient age was 80 years (range, 30-97 years). In 114 cases the fracture was traumatic in origin, most commonly a simple fall (86%). In 19 cases the fracture was atraumatic with histopathological analysis demonstrating the presence of bony metastases. Overall, breast (35%), lower gastrointestinal (22%), prostatic (18%) and bronchogenic carcinomas (7%) were the most common associated malignancies. On reviewing the full-length anteroposterior and lateral femoral radiographs, none of the patients had demonstrable pathology in the remainder of the femur. Furthermore, none of the patients to date have required readmission with a secondary fracture relating to disease in the middle or distal thirds of their femur. We conclude that full-length views of the femur are of limited value in patients presenting with a femoral neck fracture and a co-existent history of malignant disease. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-2604475 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2008 |
publisher | The Ulster Medical Society |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-26044752008-12-18 Full-Length Radiographs Of The Femur In Patients With A Femoral Neck Fracture and Co-Existent Malignancy- Are They Of Benefit? O'Flaherty, Maurice T Thompson, Neville W Ellis, Peter K Barr, R John Ulster Med J Paper It is recommended that full-length femoral radiographs should be obtained in patients presenting with a femoral neck fracture and a co-existent history of malignancy. Over a two-year period, we identified 133 (47 males, 86 females) patients admitted with a femoral neck fracture and a co-existent history of malignant disease, representing 6.5% of all femoral neck fractures admitted within this time frame. None of the patients had previously diagnosed bone metastases. The mean patient age was 80 years (range, 30-97 years). In 114 cases the fracture was traumatic in origin, most commonly a simple fall (86%). In 19 cases the fracture was atraumatic with histopathological analysis demonstrating the presence of bony metastases. Overall, breast (35%), lower gastrointestinal (22%), prostatic (18%) and bronchogenic carcinomas (7%) were the most common associated malignancies. On reviewing the full-length anteroposterior and lateral femoral radiographs, none of the patients had demonstrable pathology in the remainder of the femur. Furthermore, none of the patients to date have required readmission with a secondary fracture relating to disease in the middle or distal thirds of their femur. We conclude that full-length views of the femur are of limited value in patients presenting with a femoral neck fracture and a co-existent history of malignant disease. The Ulster Medical Society 2008-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2604475/ /pubmed/18956800 Text en © The Ulster Medical Society, 2008 |
spellingShingle | Paper O'Flaherty, Maurice T Thompson, Neville W Ellis, Peter K Barr, R John Full-Length Radiographs Of The Femur In Patients With A Femoral Neck Fracture and Co-Existent Malignancy- Are They Of Benefit? |
title | Full-Length Radiographs Of The Femur In Patients With A Femoral Neck Fracture and Co-Existent Malignancy- Are They Of Benefit? |
title_full | Full-Length Radiographs Of The Femur In Patients With A Femoral Neck Fracture and Co-Existent Malignancy- Are They Of Benefit? |
title_fullStr | Full-Length Radiographs Of The Femur In Patients With A Femoral Neck Fracture and Co-Existent Malignancy- Are They Of Benefit? |
title_full_unstemmed | Full-Length Radiographs Of The Femur In Patients With A Femoral Neck Fracture and Co-Existent Malignancy- Are They Of Benefit? |
title_short | Full-Length Radiographs Of The Femur In Patients With A Femoral Neck Fracture and Co-Existent Malignancy- Are They Of Benefit? |
title_sort | full-length radiographs of the femur in patients with a femoral neck fracture and co-existent malignancy- are they of benefit? |
topic | Paper |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2604475/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18956800 |
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