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Rotational Remodeling of Malrotated Femoral Fractures
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1992
Year
Skeletal TraumaPediatric Orthopedic SurgeryRotational RemodelingBiomechanicsSurgical StabilizationOsteoarthritisOrthopaedicsFemoral FracturesFracture HealingSurgeryMedicineOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryExternal FixatorsDistal Fragments
It is estimated that 20-40% of femoral fractures in children heal in malrotation, yet few patients later complain. To determine if malrotation corrects spontaneously, midshaft osteotomies were made in femurs of 16 rabbits aged 8 weeks and the distal fragments were internally rotated 45 degrees, where they were held with external fixators. The animals were killed between week 0 and week 17. Version of the femoral necks was determined by computed tomography scan (CT). The version altered rapidly toward normal from weeks 0 to 4 and then remained stable, with an average rotational remodeling of 55%.