• ABSTRACT
    • Subtrochanteric femoral fractures are one of the common fractures encountered in today's Orthopaedic practice. High stress leads implant failure and produce varus collapse. From the perspective of biomechanics, intramedullary fixation has unique advantage which can better distribute stress and acting load-sharing implants. Biomechanically proximal wide canal and short segment provide less optimal fixation by conventional intramedullary nails. Intramedullary nail by Surgical Implant Generation Network (SIGN) has proximal interlocking that gain purchase through femoral neck and provide improved stability for proximal part. The aim of this study was to evaluate the functional outcome of subtrochanteric fractures fixation by intramedullary interlocking SIGN nail. This prospective study was conducted from July 2016 to June 2018 at National Institute of Traumatology and Orthopaedic Rehabilitation (NITOR) through non randomized purposive sampling. Total 31 patients, aged above 18 years irrespective of sex with closed subtrochanteric fractures were included. Patients with pathological fracture, multiple injuries were excluded from the study. The mean age of the patients was 42.61±19.59 years with range 18-80 years. Most common fractures were Seinsheimer type III (51.6%) and average follows up 42.39 weeks (24-48 weeks). Union rate 93.55% with delayed union 6.45% and no nonunion. Functionally most of patient started early partial (77.42%) and full (64.52%) weight bearing with 61.29% have full knee ROM and 83.9% without limb shortening. Maximum patients regained walking (83.87%) and squatting (90.32%) and return to preinjury state (80.65%) of activities. Evaluation of outcome by Modified Harris Hip Score showed excellent (70.97%), good (22.58%), fair (3.23%) and poor (3.23%) thus satisfactory outcome were 93.55%. This study concludes that intramedullary interlocking SIGN nail is a safe and reliable implant for the treatment of subtrochanteric fractures with excellent functional outcome.