The Extended-Short Nail System, a Novel Concept in the Management of Proximal Femur Fractures
Russell C. Wright, BS, Stephan V. Yacoubian, MD, Garrett A. Salzman, Raymond B. Raven III, MD, Yuri Falkinstein, MD, and Shahan V. Yacoubian, MD
In light of recent health care reform and the aging US Medicare population, it is becoming increasingly important for orthopedic surgeons to use effective and efficient strategies for hip fracture surgery.
The Extended-Short Nail System (ES nail) is a US Food and Drug Administration–approved titanium nail which is locked at the same location as the locking hole of a short intramedullary (IM) nail. The ES nail takes advantage of an “extended-short” hybrid design combining the mechanical characteristics of a long IM nail with the surgical ease of use offered with a short IM nail.
We retrospectively studied the 2-year outcomes of the first 150 patients who underwent intertrochanteric fracture fixation with ES nails. Fifty-four of the 93 patients (58.1%) available at 2 years had returned to prefracture level of activity (based on UCLA Activity Scale scores). There were 2 postoperative periprosthetic fractures, 2 wound infections, and 3 postoperative hematomas, but no nonunions, implant failures, cutouts, or fixation failures.
Our experience with the ES nail system—its ease of use, low complication rate, high union rate, and favorable rate of patients’ return to prefracture activity level—suggests it is a viable option in the management of hip fractures.