Treatment.—As this fracture usually occurs in robust patients, there is no danger from prolonged confinement to bed; and as union without deformity can be attained in no other way, this is always advisable. When the shortening and eversion are excessive, they should be completely corrected under anæsthesia before the retentive apparatus is applied, any impaction that exists being undone. When the deformity resulting from impaction is slight, however, it is best to leave it, as it facilitates speedy and firm union.
Extension is obtained by the same appliances as are used in fracture of the shaft, and the limb should be kept in the abducted position.
Fracture of the greater trochanter occurring apart from fracture of the neck usually results from direct violence, but may be due to muscular action. The trochanter is displaced by the gluteal muscles, causing broadening of the lateral aspect of the hip. In young persons the epiphysis of the great trochanter may be separated, but this is rare. The treatment consists in retaining the fragments in position by keeping the limb abducted between sand-bags, or by pegs driven in through the skin.
Fracture immediately below the lesser trochanter may be produced by direct or by indirect violence, and the displacement depends largely on whether the line of fracture is transverse or oblique. The proximal fragment is kept tilted forward, rotated laterally, and abducted by the ilio-psoas muscle and the lateral rotators inserted in the region of the great trochanter. The lower fragment passes upward, and is rotated laterally by the weight of the limb; the displacement is aggravated by the contraction of the flexor and adductor muscles. The tilting of the proximal fragment may be increased by the displaced distal fragment pushing it forward.
On account of the difficulty of controlling the short proximal fragment, union is liable to take place with considerable shortening and deformity ([Fig. 69]).
Fig. 69.—Fracture of the Femur just below the Small Trochanter united, showing flexion and lateral rotation of upper fragment.
Treatment.—When it is found, under an anæsthetic, that the displacement can be completely reduced, and does not tend to recur, this fracture is treated on the same lines as fracture of the shaft of the bone.
In cases in which the proximal fragment cannot be brought into line with the distal one, however, it is necessary to flex, evert, and abduct the thigh in order to get the fragments into apposition and into line. A Hodgen's splint ([Fig. 77]) is applied with the highest sling under the upper end of the lower fragment and with sufficient extension to correct overriding. The upper end is then strongly lifted by a counter-weight of about 15 lbs. This secures apposition of the fragments with slight forward angulation at the seat of fracture. By the end of a month sufficient callus has formed to prevent re-displacement, and if the counter-weight is gradually diminished the two fragments sag back together into a normal alignment (J. N. J. Hartley). A double-inclined plane ([Fig. 70]), with extension applied in the axis of the thigh, gives satisfactory results.