Title: History of Intramedullary Nails
1History of Intramedullary Nails
- By Kevin WhiteMedical Radiation Technologist
- Waikato Hospital
2The Beginnings 16th Century
- Bernardino de Sahagun (Anthropologist), had
travel to Mexico and witnessed Aztec physicians
placing wooden sticks into the medullary canals
of patients with long bone non-union.
3Mid 1800s
- Ivory pegs were inserted into the medullary canal
for non-union. - It had been observed that ivory would get
reabsorbed in the human bone.
41890
- Gluck recorded the first description of an
interlocked intramedullary device. - The device consisted of an ivory intramedullary
nail that contained 2 holes at the end, through
which ivory interlocking pins could be passed
through.
51917
- Hoglund of United States reported the use of
autogenous bone as a intramedulary implant. - A span of cortex was cut out and then passed up
the medullary cavity across the fracture site.
6WWI
- Hey Groves of England reported the use of
metallic rods for the treatment of gunshot
wounds. - Very high infection rate.
71931
- Smith-Petersen reported the success of stainless
steel nails for the treatment of NOF s - The application of metallic intramedullary
implants began to expand rapidly.
81930s
- In the United States, Rush and Rush described the
use of metallic Steinman pins placed in the
medullary canal to treat fractures of the
proximal ulna and proximal femur.
9The Evolution of Kuntscher Nailing
10Gerhard Kuntscher 1900-1972
- Gerhard Kuntscher was born in Germany in 1900.
11Gerhard Kuntscher - continued
- His early interest in intramedullary devices
resulted from his work with the Smith-Petersen
nail. - Kuntscher believed the same basic science
principles would be able to be used for
diaphyseal fractures.
12Gerhard Kuntscher - continued
- During development of his marrow nail he
conducted studies on cadavers' and animals.
13Gerhard Kuntscher - continued
- The result was a V-shaped stainless steel nail
that was inserted antegrade. - The V-shaped nail was first used in 1940
- By 1947, 105 cases using the V-shaped nail had be
performed by Küntscher and Finnish surgeons.
14Gerhard Kuntscher - continued
- By late 1940s, Küntscher had designed a new nail,
the cloverleaf nail.
15Gerhard Kuntscher - continued
- While there was some interest in the use of
Küntschers technique in Europe during World War
II, his method was essentially unknown in the US. - This was until it was described in an article
published in the March 12, 1945, Time Magazine.
Titled Amazing Thighbone
16Medicine Amazing ThighboneMonday, Mar. 12, 1945
- At England General Hospital in Atlantic City last
week was a wounded soldier with a strangely
mended femur (thighbone). The man had been
treated by the Germans, his captors. - When the broken bone failed to heal, after weeks
of conventional treatment, the soldier was
operated on. He was mystified to find that his
only new wound was a 2½-inch incision above the
hipbone. Two days later, the German surgeons told
him to move his leg a few days after that, they
told him to walk. He did. He has walked ever
since. - After his exchange, U.S. Army doctors X-rayed the
soldier's leg. They were amazed at what they saw
a half-inch metal rod of some kind had been
rammed down the thighbone through the marrow for
three-quarters of the bone's length, thus
supplying a permanent, internal splint. - Mechanically, the surgeons agree, there is no
reason such a splint should not work if the lower
end of the rod were firmly wedged in hard tissue.
But in the past, use of internal splints has been
restricted to slim wire to align broken bones in
fingers, toes and arms. In such cases, outside
splinting is also used and the mended bones are
not required to withstand any end-to-end
pressure. They call the rod technique "a daring
operation" and wonder how their German colleagues
insert it without dangerously cutting down blood
supply and without introducing infection.
Surgeons at the hospital cautiously say they
"have no opinion one way or another about this
case." But they add that they are not quite
satisfied with the way the bone is mending around
the metal crutch, possibly because of impaired
circulation.
171940s
- Küntscher was not the only person experimenting
with the use of intramedullary nails. - Westerborn reported using a V-shaped nail in the
Scandinavian literature in 1944. - In 1946, Soeur reported the use of a U-shaped
nail in a femur, tibia and humerus.
181940s continued
- In the US, the Hansen-Street nail was introduced
in 1947. This was a solid diamond-shaped nail. - Inserted using a closed method, to avoid the high
infection rate. - Then penicillin allowed the open retrograde
nailing to avoid side effects of the radiographic
techniques of the day.
191950s
- Two important techniques were developed.
- Intramedullary reamers
- Interlocking Screws
- Both techniques improved stability.
201950s Intramedullary reamers
- Flexible reamers were developed by Küntscher.
211950s Interlocking Screws
- Modny and Bambara introduced the transfixion
intramedullary nail in 1953. - Multiple holes down the length of the nail.
Allowing placement of screws at 90o angles from
each other.
221960s
- Intramedullary nailing went on hiatus in the
1960s. Due to increased enthusiasm for
compression plating of long bone fractures. - Developments still continued with the
cephalomedullary nails.
231960s continued
- The development of radiological image
intensification, allowed surgeons to readopt
closed nailing techniques. With lower risks to
surgeon and patient.
241970s and 1980s
- The exuberance that accompanied the advent of
compression plating for tibias and femurs in the
1960s quickly diminished in the 1970s. - Thus renewed interest in refining closed nailing
techniques appeared.
251970s and 1980s continued
- The dominant design during this period was the
slotted cloverleaf-shaped interlocked nail, e.g.
the AO and Grosse-Kempf nail.
261990s and the 21st Century
- Introduction of new titanium nails,
cephalomedullary devices such as the GSH
(Green-Seligson-Henry) nail. - Slotted cloverleaf designs were being replaced by
non-slotted designs. Which provided greater
torsional rigidity.
27Future
- Two areas of future research.
- Biomaterials
- Biodegradable polymers
- Shape memory alloy
- Biological
- Bone morphogenic protein-2 and -7
28Acknowledgements
- Thank you to Kathy Hogan for this opportunity.
- Thank you to Google images for finding all the
images for the presentation.
29Acknowledgements continued
- Thanks to Time Magazine.
- Medicine Amazing ThighboneMonday, Mar. 12, 1945
- www.time.com
30Acknowledgements continued
- Bong MR, Kovai KJ, Egol KA. The History of
Intramedullary Nailing. Bulletin of the NYU
Hospital for Joint Disease, Volume 64, Number 3
4, 2006 - This presentation is based very much on the above
article, thank you to the authors!
31Good Bye
- Thank you for coming.
- This presentation will be available at
- www.kevin.neatstuff.co.nz