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- Nikkole M Haines, William D Lack, Rachel B Seymour, and Michael J Bosse.
- *Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC; and †Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Loyola University Medical Center, Chicago, IL.
- J Orthop Trauma. 2016 May 1; 30 (5): e158-63.
ObjectivesTo determine healing outcomes of open diaphyseal tibial shaft fractures treated with reamed intramedullary nailing (IMN) with a bone gap of 10-50 mm on ≥50% of the cortical circumference and to better define a "critical bone defect" based on healing outcome.DesignRetrospective cohort study.PatientsForty patients, age 18-65, with open diaphyseal tibial fractures with a bone gap of 10-50 mm on ≥50% of the circumference as measured on standard anteroposterior and lateral postoperative radiographs treated with IMN.InterventionIMN of an open diaphyseal tibial fracture with a bone gap.SettingLevel-1 trauma center.Main Outcome MeasurementsHealing outcomes, union or nonunion.ResultsForty patients were analyzed. Twenty-one (52.5%) went on to nonunion and nineteen (47.5%) achieved union. Radiographic apparent bone gap (RABG) and infection were the only 2 covariates predicting nonunion outcome (P = 0.046 for infection). The RABG was determined by measuring the bone gap on each cortex and averaging over 4 cortices. Fractures achieving union had a RABG of 12 ± 1 mm versus 20 ± 2 mm in those going on to nonunion (P < 0.01). This remained significant when patients with infection were removed. Receiver operator characteristic analysis demonstrated that RABG was predictive of outcome (area under the curve of 0.79). A RABG of 25 mm was the statistically optimal threshold for prediction of healing outcome.ConclusionsPatients with open diaphyseal tibial fractures treated with IMN and a <25 mm RABG have a reasonable probability of achieving union without additional intervention, whereas those with larger gaps have a higher probability of nonunion. Research investigating interventions for RABGs should use a predictive threshold for defining a critical bone defect that is associated with greater than 50% risk of nonunion without supplementary treatment.Level Of EvidencePrognostic Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
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