Hip fracture surgery is done to repair a break in the upper part of the thigh bone. The thigh bone is called the femur. It is part of the hip joint.
Hip pain is a related topic.
Alternative Names
Inter-trochanteric fracture repair; Subtrochanteric fracture repair; Femoral neck fracture repair; Trochanteric fracture repair; Hip pinning surgery; Osteoarthritis-hip
Description
You may receive general anesthesia before this surgery. This means you will be unconscious and unable to feel pain. You may have spinal anesthesia. With this kind of anesthesia, medicine is put into your back to make you numb below your waist.
The type of surgery you have depends on the kind of fracture you have.
If your fracture is in the neck of the femur (the part just below the top of the bone) you may have a hip pinning procedure. During this surgery:
- You lie on a special table. This allows your surgeon to use an x-ray machine to see how well the parts of your hip bone line up.
- The surgeon makes a small incision (cut) on the side of your thigh.
- Special screws are placed to hold the bones in their correct position.
- This surgery takes 2 to 4 hours.
If you have an intertrochanteric fracture (the area below the femur neck), your surgeon will use a special metal plate and special compression screws to repair it. Often more than one piece of bone is broken in this type of fracture. During this surgery:
- You lie on a special table. This allows your surgeon to use an x-ray machine to see how well the parts of your hip bone line up.
- The surgeon makes a surgical cut on the side of your thigh.
- The metal plate or nail is attached with a few screws.
- This surgery takes less than 2 hours.
Your surgeon may perform a partial hip replacement (hemiarthroplasty) if there is concern that your hip will not heal well using one of the procedures above. Hemiarthroplasty replaces the ball part of your hip joint.