TY - JOUR
T1 - The floating knee
T2 - a review on ipsilateral femoral and tibial fractures
AU - Muñoz Vives, Josep
AU - Bel, Jean-Christophe
AU - Capel Agundez, Arantxa
AU - Chana Rodríguez, Francisco
AU - Palomo Traver, José
AU - Schultz-Larsen, Morten
AU - Tosounidis, Theodoros
PY - 2016/11/1
Y1 - 2016/11/1
N2 - In 1975, Blake and McBryde established the concept of 'floating knee' to describe ipsilateral fractures of the femur and tibia.1This combination is much more than a bone lesion; the mechanism is usually a high-energy trauma in a patient with multiple injuries and a myriad of other lesions.After initial evaluation patients should be categorised, and only stable patients should undergo immediate reduction and internal fixation with the rest receiving external fixation.Definitive internal fixation of both bones yields the best results in almost all series.Nailing of both bones is the optimal fixation when both fractures (femoral and tibial) are extra-articular.Plates are the 'standard of care' in cases with articular fractures.A combination of implants are required by 40% of floating knees.Associated ligamentous and meniscal lesions are common, but may be irrelevant in the case of an intra-articular fracture which gives the worst prognosis for this type of lesion. Cite this article: Muñoz Vives K, Bel J-C, Capel Agundez A, Chana Rodríguez F, Palomo Traver J, Schultz-Larsen M, Tosounidis, T. The floating knee.EFORT Open Rev2016;1:375-382. DOI: 10.1302/2058-5241.1.000042.
AB - In 1975, Blake and McBryde established the concept of 'floating knee' to describe ipsilateral fractures of the femur and tibia.1This combination is much more than a bone lesion; the mechanism is usually a high-energy trauma in a patient with multiple injuries and a myriad of other lesions.After initial evaluation patients should be categorised, and only stable patients should undergo immediate reduction and internal fixation with the rest receiving external fixation.Definitive internal fixation of both bones yields the best results in almost all series.Nailing of both bones is the optimal fixation when both fractures (femoral and tibial) are extra-articular.Plates are the 'standard of care' in cases with articular fractures.A combination of implants are required by 40% of floating knees.Associated ligamentous and meniscal lesions are common, but may be irrelevant in the case of an intra-articular fracture which gives the worst prognosis for this type of lesion. Cite this article: Muñoz Vives K, Bel J-C, Capel Agundez A, Chana Rodríguez F, Palomo Traver J, Schultz-Larsen M, Tosounidis, T. The floating knee.EFORT Open Rev2016;1:375-382. DOI: 10.1302/2058-5241.1.000042.
KW - Epidemiology
KW - Femur fracture
KW - Floating knee
KW - Nailing
KW - Plating
KW - Tibia fracture
U2 - 10.1302/2058-5241.1.000042
DO - 10.1302/2058-5241.1.000042
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 28461916
SN - 2396-7544
VL - 1
SP - 375
EP - 382
JO - EFORT Open Reviews
JF - EFORT Open Reviews
IS - 11
ER -