Mortality and functional independence one year after hip fracture surgery: extracapsular fracture versus intracapsular fracture

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TitreMortality and functional independence one year after hip fracture surgery: extracapsular fracture versus intracapsular fracture
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursMeunier A, Maczynski A, Asgassou S, Baulot E, Manckoundia P, Martz P
JournalGERIATRIE ET PSYCHOLOGIE NEUROPSYCHIATRIE DE VIEILLISSEMENT
Volume17
Pagination153-162
Date PublishedJUN
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN2115-8789
Mots-cléselderly patients, extracapsular fracture, hip fracture, intracapsular fracture, Mortality
Résumé

{Objectives: Outcome in hip fracture patients tends to be poor, with an associated death rate of 20 to 33%. The primary aim of our monocentric retrospective study was to compare mortality rates one year after surgery in patients with extracapsular fracture versus patients with intracapsular fracture of the proximal femur. Our secondary aims were the evaluation of functional independence and the rate of institutionalization one year after surgery. Methods: We compared two groups of 100 patients. The first group had an average age of 83.2 years, and the patients underwent total hip replacement for intracapsular fracture. Patients in the second group, who underwent osteosynthesis for extracapsular fracture, were aged 83.6 years on average. Results: One year post-surgery, there was not a significant difference in mortality between the two groups (23% for extracapsular fracture vs 22% for intracapsular fracture). The rate of independent walking was significantly better in the intracapsular fracture group (42.3% vs 27.3%

DOI10.1684/pnv.2018.0769