• Title of article

    Antegrade vs Retrograde Intra-Medullary Nailing in Femoral Shaft Fractures: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

  • Author/Authors

    Daher ، Mohammad Orthopedics department - Hotel Dieu de France , Tarchichi ، Jean Orthopedics department - Hotel Dieu de France , Zalaquett ، Ziad Orthopedics department - Hotel Dieu de France , Casey ، Jack Orthopedics department - Hotel Dieu de France , Ghanimeh ، Joe Department of Orthopaedic Surgery - Medical Center Rizk Hospital - Lebanese American University University Medical Center Rizk Hospital , Mansour ، Jad Division of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine - University of Toronto

  • From page
    535
  • To page
    545
  • Abstract
    Objectives: Femoral shaft fractures are one of the most prevalent fractures found in clinical practice. Numerous operative and non-operative options are readily available for the treatment of such fractures with intra-medullary nailing being the gold standard. To date, no consensus has been reached favoring one approach over the other. Thus, this meta-analysis aims to compare the outcomes between an antegrade and retrograde intra-medullary nailing for the treatment of femoral shaft fractures.Methods: PubMed, Cochrane, Google Scholar (page 1-20), and Embase were searched till January 2024. The clinical outcomes evaluated were the incidence of adverse events, reoperations, hip and knee pain, and surgery-related parameters.Results: Higher rates of hip pain, and heterotopic ossification (p=0.0003, and p=0.0002 respectively) was observed with antegrade nailing. However, a higher rate of knee pain (p=0.02) was appreciated in retrograde nailing. There was no statistically significant difference in the remaining analyzed outcomes such as operative time, reoperation rate or other complications.Conclusion: Despite a higher rate of heterotopic ossification using the antegrade nailing technique, both the antegrade and retrograde nailing techniques yield overall similar outcomes. Therefore, the decision to choose one or the other should be based on patient-related factors, and the surgeon’s experience and preference. Level of evidence: IV
  • Keywords
    Antegrade , Femoral shaft fractures , Intra , medullary nail , Pseudoarthrosis , retrograde
  • Journal title
    The Archives of Bone and Joint Surgery
  • Journal title
    The Archives of Bone and Joint Surgery
  • Record number

    2765194