• Medicine · Jan 2022

    Case Reports

    Case report of a delayed iatrogenic Pipkin type III femoral head fracture-dislocation.

    • Qin-Wen Li, Cai-Sheng Zhou, and Yu-Peng Li.
    • Department of Orthopedics, The People's Hospital of Three Gorges University, The First People's Hospital of Yichang, Yichang, Hubei, China.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2022 Jan 28; 101 (4): e28773e28773.

    RationalePipkin III femoral head fracture dislocation (FHFD) is rarely observed in clinical practice, and its outcome is alarming. A considerable proportion of Pipkin III fractures result from repeated or forceful closed reduction of an irreducible FHFD. Pipkin type III fractures pose a therapeutic challenge. Most patients underwent total hip arthroplasty.Patient ConcernsA 34-year-old man experienced high-energy trauma to the left hip from a terrible traffic accident. Radiography and computed tomography (CT) at the local hospital revealed a left posterior FHFD. Emergency close reduction of the hip was performed.48 hours later, the patient was transferred to our institution. New radiography and CT examinations demonstrated an iatrogenic femoral neck fracture (FNF) associated with FHFD. In addition, a right talar fracture was observed.DiagnosisPipkin III fracture combined with contralateral talar fracture.InterventionsConsidering his Pipkin fracture classification (Pipkin Type-III) and the time to surgery after his injury (>48 hours), the patient underwent left total hip arthroplasty uneventfully, followed by below-ankle plaster cast immobilization for his right ankle.OutcomesAt the 6-month follow-up, the patient was able to walk pain-free, and plain radiographs were satisfactory, with no evidence of heterotopic ossification or osteonecrosis of the talus.LessonsBefore emergency closed reduction, early recognition of the unique characteristics of an irreducible FHFD is essential to avoid iatrogenic femoral neck fracture.Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

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