Proximal Hip Fracture: Does Canal Width Matter?
Maria Oulianski, Amit Sagi, Philip Rosinsky, Garrik Bilenko, Dana Avraham, Omri Lubovsky

TL;DR
This study finds that canal width in hip X-rays can predict whether a fracture is trochanteric or sub-capital, with wider canals linked to trochanteric fractures.
Contribution
The study identifies the calcar-to-canal ratio (CCR) as a novel predictive morphological parameter for proximal hip fracture types.
Findings
CCR was significantly associated with trochanteric fractures (p = 0.001).
CCR showed high reliability with ICC values of 0.791 and 0.770.
Logistic regression predicted 60.4% of fracture types correctly using CCR.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Proximal femur fractures are common in the older population and are related to bone quality. Our work evaluates bone parameters from pelvic anteroposterior (AP) radiographs in patients with trochanteric and sub-capital fractures to determine if there are predictive morphology parameters for each fracture type. Methods: Data from 237 medical records were extracted from patients who arrived at our hospital with trochanteric and sub-capital femoral fractures. Descriptive data and radiological evaluation of the calcar-to-canal ratio (CCR), cortical thickness index (CTI), and Dorr classification were measured by two observers and statistically evaluated. Results: A total of 202 patients were found to be eligible for the study. The mean patient age was 81.41 ± 7.27 years old. The mean age of the trochanteric group was significantly higher than that of the sub-capital…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHip and Femur Fractures · Bone health and osteoporosis research · Pelvic and Acetabular Injuries
