Basicervical fracture, defined as an extracapsular fracture, through the base of the femoral neck at its junction with the intertrochanteric region, corresponding to the AO type B2. 1 femoral neck at its junction with the intertrochanteric region.Dec 3, 2020
2022 ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code S72. 0: Fracture of head and neck of femur.
Most hip fractures occur just below the head of the thighbone. There are two common types: Femoral neck (subcapital) hip fractures, which occur in the neck of the thighbone. Intertrochanteric hip fractures, which go through the large bumps just below the neck.
Femoral neck fractures are a specific type of intracapsular hip fracture. The femoral neck connects the femoral shaft with the femoral head. The hip joint is the articulation of the femoral head with the acetabulum. The junctional location makes the femoral neck prone to fracture.May 19, 2021
The femoral neck is the region of the femur bounded by the femoral head proximally and the greater and lesser trochanters distally (shown below). A femoral neck fracture is intracapsular, that is within the hip joint and beneath the fibrous joint capsule.
femur, also called thighbone, upper bone of the leg or hind leg. The head forms a ball-and-socket joint with the hip (at the acetabulum), being held in place by a ligament (ligamentum teres femoris) within the socket and by strong surrounding ligaments.
Subcapital fracture is the most common type of intracapsular neck of femur fracture. The fracture line extends through the junction of the head and neck of femur.Apr 7, 2019
subcapital is the femoral head and neck junction. transcervical is the mid portion of femoral neck. basicervical is the base of femoral neck.Dec 11, 2018
Clinical examinationThe affected leg is shortened, externally rotated and abducted.Palpation of the hip produces pain.The patient is unable to perform a straight leg raise (useful for discerning occult hip fractures)Pain on gentle internal and external rotation of the affected leg (log roll test)More items...•Nov 12, 2021
Grade I is an incomplete or valgus impacted fracture. Grade II is a complete fracture without bone displacement. Grade III is a complete fracture with partial displacement of the fracture fragments. Grade IV is a complete fracture with total displacement of the fracture fragments.Feb 5, 2021
There are three types: subcapital: femoral head/neck junction. transcervical: midportion of femoral neck. basicervical: base of femoral neck.Apr 15, 2022
The femoral neck fractures are rare among young people – they are only 2% in patients under 50 years of age [9]. The incidence increases with age, and after 50 years is doubled for each subsequent decade, and is 2-3 times higher in women than in men [5, 10].Jul 2, 2014
The ICD code S720 is used to code Hip fracture. A hip fracture is a serious femoral fracture that occurs in the proximal end of the femur (the long bone running through the thigh), near the hip. MeSH Code: 68006620. AP hip radiograph demonstrating an intertrochanteric fracture. Source: Wikipedia.
Type-2 Excludes means the excluded conditions are different, although they may appear similar. A patient may have both conditions, but one does not include the other. Excludes 2 means "not coded here."