Anterior Knee Pain after Intramedullary Nailing of Tibial Fractures: Medial Parapatellar versus Transtendinous Approach


Abstract views: 95 / PDF downloads: 37

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5152/EurJTher.2018.595

Keywords:

Anterior knee pain, intramedullary nailing, tibial shaft fractures

Abstract

Objective: Chronic anterior knee pain has been considered as the most frequent postoperative complication of tibial nailing surgery technique. Surgical approaches used for tibial intramedullary nailing include medial parapatellar, transtendinous, and lateral parapatellar techniques, but lateral parapatellar approach is less preferred. The aim of the present study was to determine the role of medial parapatellar and transtendinous approaches on anterior knee pain of patients with tibial diaphyseal fractures treated with intramedullary nail.
Methods: A total of 132 patients who were admitted to our emergency clinic with tibial shaft fracture between January 2015 and January 2017 were evaluated retrospectively. Of the 132 patients, 45 patients who were treated with intramedullary nail were included in the present study. Medial parapatellar approach was used in 20 fractures, and transtendinous approach was used in 27 fractures.
Results: The mean follow-up period of the patients was 12 (6–15) months. The mean union time of fractures was 5 (3–15) months. Severity of anterior knee pain was assessed by Visual Analog Scale (VAS). There was no statistically significant difference between the medial parapatellar method and the transtendinous method according to proximal nail entry exposures in anterior knee pain (p=0.927).
Conclusion: In conclusion, although tibial nailing is a highly successful procedure for fracture healing, anterior knee pain remains the main disadvantage of it. Although our data showed no differences between the groups, the groups were relatively small to accept this null hypothesis with full confidence.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

McGrath L, Royston S. Fractures of the tibial shaft (including acute compartment syndrome). Surgery 2007; 25: 439-44.

Väistö O, Toivanen J, Paakkala T, Järvelä T, Kannus P, Järvinen M. Anterior knee pain after intramedullary nailing of a tibial shaft fracture: an ultrasound study of the patellar tendons of 36 patients. J Orthop Trauma 2005; 19: 311-6.

.Orfaly R, Keating JE, O’Brien PJ. Knee pain after tibial nailing: does the entrypoint matter? J Bone Joint Surg Br 1995; 77: 976-7.

Bhandari M, Guyatt G, Tornetta III P, Schemitsch EH, Swiontkowski M, Sanders D, et al. Randomizedtrial of reamedandunreamed intramedullary nailing of tibial shaft fractures. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2008; 90: 2567-78.

Lefaivre KA, Guy P, Chan H, Blachut PA. Long-termfollow-up of tibial shaft fracture streated with intramedullary nailing. J Orthop Trauma 2008; 22: 525-9.

Toivanen JA, Väistö O, Kannus P, Latvala K, Honkonen SE, Järvinen MJ. Anterior knee pain after intramedullary nailing of fractures of the tibial shaft. A prospective, randomized study comparing two different nail-insertion techniques. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2002; 84: 580-5.

Väistö O, Toivanen J, Kannus P, Järvinen M. Anterior knee pain after intramedullary nailing of fractures of the tibial shaft: an eight-year follow-up of a prospective, randomized study comparing two different nail-insertion techniques. J Trauma 2008; 64: 1511-6.

Väistö O, Toivanen J, Kannus P, Järvinen M. Anterior knee pain and thigh muscle strength after intramedullary nailing of a tibial shaft fracture: an 8-year follow-up of 28 consecutive cases. J Orthop Trauma 2007; 21: 165-71.

Court-Brown CM, Gustilo T, Shaw AD. Knee pain after intramedullary tibial nailing: it’sincidence, etiology, andoutcome. J Orthop Trauma 1997; 11: 103-5.

Court-Brown CM. Fractures of the tibia and fibula. In: Bucholz RW, Heckman JD, Court-Brown CM, editors. RockwoodandGreen’sfractures in adults. Vol. 2, 6th ed. Philadelphia: Lippincott; 2006. p. 2079- 146.

Katsoulis E, Court-Brown C, Giannoudis PV. Incidenceandaetiology of anteriorkneepainafterintramedullarynailing of thefemurandtibia. J Bone Joint Surg 2006; 88: 576-80.

Al Hussainy HAJ, Deeb A, Choudhary AK. Anterior knee pain following intramedullary nailing of tibial shaft fractures: does bony portal point in the sagittal plane affect the outcome? Eur J Orthop Surg Trauma 2005; 15: 113-7. 13. Väistö O, Toivanen J, Kannus P, Järvinen M. Anterior knee pain and thigh muscle strength after intramedullary nailing of tibial shaft fractures: a report of 40 consecutive cases. J Orthop Trauma 2004;18: 18-23.

Keating JF, Orfaly R, O’Brien PJ. Knee pain after tibial nailing. J Orthop Trauma 1997; 11: 10-3.

Orfaly R, Keating JE, O’Brien PJ. Knee pain after tibia nailing: does the entry point matter? J Bone Joint Surg Br 1995; 77: 976-7.

Aitken RC. Measurement of feelings using visual analogue scales. Proc R Soc Med 1969; 62: 989-93.

Bhattacharyya T, Seng K, Nassif NA, Freedman I. Knee pain after tibial nailing: the role of nail prominence. Clin Orthop Relat Res 2006; 449: 303-7.

Duan X, Al-Qwbani M, Zeng Y, Zhang W, Xiang Z. Intramedullary nailing for tibial shaft fractures in adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2012; 1: CD008241.

Hernigou P, Cohen D. Proximal entry for intramedullary nailing of tibia. The risk of unrecognised articular damage. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2000; 82: 33-41.

Devitt AT, Coughlan KA, Ward T, McCormack D, Mulcahy D, Felle P, et al. Patellofemoral contact forces and pressures during intramedullary tibial nailing. Int Orthop 1998; 22: 92-6.

Leliveld MS, Verhofstad MH. Injury to the infrapatellar branch of the saphenous nerve, a possible cause for anterior knee pain after tibial nailing? Injury 2012; 43:779-83.

Downloads

Published

2023-04-11

How to Cite

Kekeç, A. F., & Bozgeyik, B. (2023). Anterior Knee Pain after Intramedullary Nailing of Tibial Fractures: Medial Parapatellar versus Transtendinous Approach. European Journal of Therapeutics, 25(3), 179–182. https://doi.org/10.5152/EurJTher.2018.595

Issue

Section

Original Articles