In a retrospective review of eighty-two intertrochanteric fractures
(twenty-nine stable and fifty-three unstable) in seventy-nine elderly,
debilitated patients with associated advanced osteoporosis (Grade III or
less by the system of Singh et al.), fifty-six were available for
follow-up: twenty-eight that had been treated at the University of Illinois
with an approximately anatomical reduction and compression-screw fixation
and twenty-eight (in twenty-seven patients) that had been treated at the
University of Chicago with an approximately anatomical reduction,
compression-screw fixation, and adjunctive methylmethacrylate bone cement
in the head-neck fragment. Follow-up analysis after an average of
thirty-four months for the group that had augmentation with cement and an
average of twenty-six months for the uncemented group showed that for the
eighteen stable fractures that could be followed the rates of complications
of fixation were the same in the two groups, while for the thirty-eight
unstable comminuted fractures that were followed the rate of complications
of fixation was lower when adjunctive methylmethacrylate cement was used.
Among the unstable fractures, one failure (in twenty-one fractures) in the
cement-augmented group and ten failures (in seventeen fractures) in the
uncemented group were due to failure of fixation (p less than 0.01). For
reasons that are not clear, when the thirty-two patients with a healed
fracture who could be evaluated for function were rated using the Iowa hip
score, the nineteen who were treated with adjunctive cement had
significantly lower scores than did the thirteen who were treated without
cement (76 +/- 16.5 compared with 92 +/- 12.1, p less than 0.01).