# Reverse obliquity femoral neck fractures: two case reports with a literature review

**Authors:** Zheyuan Huang, Hongjun Fu, Haoyuan Liu, Xiaolin Chen, Jianming Huang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2026.1731749 · Frontiers in Surgery · 2026-01-26

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a new type of femoral neck fracture called reverse-obliquity and describes successful treatment strategies for two patients.

## Contribution

The paper identifies and names a previously unrecognized variant of femoral neck fracture with a Pauwels angle ≥90° and no cortical contact.

## Key findings

- Reverse-obliquity femoral neck fractures (ROFNF) have a Pauwels angle ≥90° and lack Gotfried-positive cortical contact.
- Closed reduction failed in both cases, but open reduction with a screw-plus-medial-buttress method achieved successful union.
- Two patients with ROFNF were successfully treated using an anterior hip approach and medial buttress plate fixation.

## Abstract

Vertical femoral neck fractures—those with a Pauwels angle >70°—are an especially demanding subset, notorious for their recalcitrance to fixation and high risk of non-union. We propose a previously unrecognized variant of femoral neck fracture in which the fracture plane is vertical (Pauwels ≥ 90°) and lacks any Gotfried-positive cortical contact, a configuration we designate “reverse-obliquity femoral neck fracture” (ROFNF). This report describes two cases of ROFNF and their respective therapeutic strategies.

The index patient was a 56-year-old woman who sustained a Pauwels-III femoral neck fracture (95°) after slipping while playing table tennis. The second patient, a 45-year-old male, sustained a right femoral neck fracture (Pauwels III, 90°) during an electric vehicle rollover. Lumbar epidural anesthesia was administered supine on a fluoroscopy-compatible table for both cases. Following unsuccessful closed anatomical reduction, an anterior hip approach was utilized for open reduction. Fixation consisted of three 7.3 mm cannulated screws supplemented by a medial buttress plate; radiographs at 8–9 months confirmed uneventful union in both patients.

We were unable to find any prior description of a femoral-neck fracture whose inclination reaches or exceeds 90° while also failing every Gotfried cortical-support criterion. In the two patients presented, closed manipulation could not restore a stable reduction; instead, an anterior approach with open reduction and a screw-plus-medial-buttress construct produced solid union.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** femoral neck fracture (MESH:D005265)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

17 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12883629/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12883629