A femoral fracture is a break in the thigh bone. It runs from the hip to the knee. This injury is caused by trauma from: A motor vehicle accident Stress on a weakened bone Things that may raise the risk are: Having a health problem that may result in falls, such as weak muscles
What is a Femur Fracture? A femur fracture is a break in the femur bone, the leg bone that extends from the hip down to the knee joint. Since the femur is one of the largest and strongest bones in the human body, it is not a common break and usually occurs only after a serious trauma like a car accident or sporting injury.
ICD-10-CM Code for Unspecified fracture of shaft of left femur, initial encounter for closed fracture S72. 302A.
Fracture of femur ICD-10-CM S72. 309A is grouped within Diagnostic Related Group(s) (MS-DRG v39.0):
The long, straight part of the femur is called the femoral shaft. When there is a break anywhere along this length of bone, it is called a femoral shaft fracture. This type of broken leg almost always requires surgery to heal. The femoral shaft runs from below the hip to where the bone begins to widen at the knee.
A femoral shaft fracture is a break of the thigh bone between the hip and the knee. These fractures usually result from high energy injuries such as car accidents in younger patients and most often from falls in the elderly patient.
ICD-10-CM S72. 001A is grouped within Diagnostic Related Group(s) (MS-DRG v39.0): 521 Hip replacement with principal diagnosis of hip fracture with mcc. 522 Hip replacement with principal diagnosis of hip fracture without mcc.
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The 2016 to 2017 ACS-NSQIP database files were queried using CPT codes, and ICD-10 diagnosis codes to identify patients undergoing surgery for native femoral shaft fractures (CPT-27506) and/or repair of nonunion of femoral shaft fractures with/without graft (CPT-27470, CPT-27472).
A tibial shaft fracture occurs along the length of the bone, below the knee and above the ankle. It typically takes a major force to cause this type of broken leg. Motor vehicle collisions, for example, are a common cause of tibial shaft fractures.
Proximal femur includes the femoral head, neck and the region 5-cm distal to the lesser trochanter. There is a 125°–130° inclination angle between the head and neck and the femoral body. Further, there is a 15° anteversion angle between the plane passing through the condyles of the femoral head and the femur neck.
Type I: Incomplete or impacted fracture of the neck. Type II: Complete fracture without displacement in anterior or lateral direction. Type III: Complete fracture with partial displacement. The direction of bone trabecula in femoral head is not inconsistent with that of acetabulum.
thigh boneThe thigh bone, or femur, is the large upper leg bone that connects the lower leg bones (knee joint) to the pelvic bone (hip joint).
Proximal femoral fractures are a heterogeneous group of fractures that occur in and around the hip. The commonest type of fracture in this region is the femoral neck fracture. They can occur anywhere between the joint surface of the femoral head and the upper shaft (proximal diaphysis) of the femur.