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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 4 | Pages 743 - 756
1 Nov 1968
Poigenfurst J Marcove RC Miller TR

The results of 110 operations for the treatment of fractures through metastases in the femoral neck and intertrochanteric region have been studied. Of these, forty-four fractures were treated by internal fixation, forty-six by resection of the femoral head and neck, and twenty by prosthetic replacement. The following conclusions were reached.

1. Prosthetic replacement of the femoral head is a reliable procedure.

2. The long stem type of prosthesis has the advantages of greater stability and simultaneous fixation of the shaft.

3. Patients with diffuse metastatic disease of the ilium are not suitable for prosthetic replacement. These patients should be treated by resection of the femoral head and neck.

4. Resection is a less traumatic procedure and therefore useful in the palliative treatment of patients in poor general condition.

5. Internal fixation leads more often to complications and unfavourable results than do the other methods.