Der Unfallchirurg
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Operative treatment of diaphyseal fractures of the femur in older children and adolescents remains controversial due to multiple surgical options and higher complication rates in single-center studies compared to younger children. This retrospective multicenter study aimed to register early and late complications in day-by-day treatment. ⋯ Children older than 10 years of age with a body weight ≥50 kg and open physes are prone to complications regardless of treatment choice. A smaller revision rate occurred in patients treated with ESIN and end caps or a third nail compared to the other treatment options. When physes are closed, rigid intramedullary nailing is the treatment of choice.
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Review
[Rupture of the tendon of the tibialis anterior muscle : Etiology, clinical symptoms and treatment].
Ruptures of the tendon of the tibialis anterior muscle tend to occur in the context of degenerative impairments. This mainly affects the distal avascular portion of the tendon. Owing to the good compensation through the extensor hallucis longus and extensor digitorum muscles, diagnosis is often delayed. ⋯ An operative procedure is indicated when there is corresponding suffering due to pressure and functional impairment. The direct end-to-end reconstruction of the tendon is only rarely possible in cases of delayed diagnosis due to the degenerative situation and the retraction of the tendon stumps. Depending on the defect size and the tendon quality, various operative techniques, such as rotationplasty, free transplants or tendon transfer can be used.
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Although the incidence of midportion Achilles tendinopathy is under 1% in the general population, it is quite a common disease in runners that is characterized by the symptom triad of pain, swelling and impaired physical performance. Pain and swelling are located in the area 2 to 7 cm proximal the tendon insertion onto the calcaneus. Diagnosis is made by adequate clinical symptoms and corresponding findings in sonography and/or magnetic resonance imaging scans. ⋯ In about 25% of all cases, because of unsatisfactory nonoperative treatment results, surgery is recommended. Open, minimally invasive as well as tenoscopic methods exist, which show patients' satisfactory rates of about 80%. The return to sport or full physical performance is variable and may take up to 18 months for both treatment regimens.
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Percutaneous internal fixation of pelvic fractures is increasing in popularity with multiple new techniques reported. ⋯ Percutaneous fixation of pelvic fractures requires high-quality imaging and can be aided by computer navigation. Safe techniques are reproducible; however, not all patients and fracture patterns can be treated using these techniques.