Surgical Fixation · 1–3 hrs

Fracture Treatment

Precise surgical fixation of complex fractures using plates, nails, and screws — restoring alignment for early mobilisation and full functional recovery.

>95% Union Rate
2–3 hrs Procedure Time
24–48 hrs Mobilisation
6–12 wk Bone Healing

What is Fracture Treatment?

Surgical fracture fixation restores bone alignment and stability in complex or displaced fractures of the limbs, pelvis, and periarticular regions. Dr. Vipin Reddy uses open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) with plates and screws, intramedullary nailing for long bone fractures, and external fixation for contaminated or severely comminuted injuries. Early fixation reduces complications and enables immediate physiotherapy.

Fixation method (plate, nail, or external fixator) is chosen based on the fracture pattern and location — Dr. Vipin Reddy will plan the most stable construct after imaging.

Key Information

Procedure Facts

Fixation Methods

ORIF (plates & screws), intramedullary nailing, or external fixation — selected based on fracture pattern and location.

Implant Materials

Titanium or stainless steel plates, locking screws, and intramedullary nails — designed for long-term stability.

Anaesthesia

General or regional anaesthesia; procedure duration varies from 1–3 hours based on complexity.

Hospital Stay

2–5 days depending on fracture severity; physiotherapy begins immediately post-surgery.

Recovery

Bone healing in 6–12 weeks; return to full function in 3–6 months with rehabilitation.

Insurance

Covered under most health insurance and accident/trauma policies.

How the Procedure Works

1

Emergency Assessment & Imaging

X-rays and CT scans are reviewed urgently to classify the fracture, plan fixation strategy, and assess neurovascular status.

2

Pre-operative Preparation

Limb splinting, swelling management, blood work, and anaesthesia review prior to surgery.

3

Fracture Fixation Surgery

Open or closed reduction restores bone alignment; internal or external fixation maintains position for healing — typically 1–3 hours.

4

Rehabilitation & Bone Healing

Physiotherapy begins immediately post-surgery. Weight-bearing is guided by fracture healing on X-rays — most achieve full union in 6–12 weeks.

Outcomes

>95%Union Rate
24–48 hrsMobilisation
6–12 wkBone Healing
3–6 moFull Function

Who Needs This Treatment?

  • Displaced fractures of the femur, tibia, humerus, and forearm
  • Periarticular fractures around the knee, hip, ankle, or shoulder
  • Open (compound) fractures requiring wound debridement and fixation
  • Pathological fractures through bone disease or metastases
  • Non-union or mal-union requiring corrective osteotomy and re-fixation
  • Pelvic and acetabular fractures from high-energy trauma
"

Early, precise fixation of a fracture is the foundation of a good outcome. When the bone is correctly aligned and stable, the body heals — and patients regain full function far faster than with conservative treatment alone.

— Dr. Vipin Reddy, Orthopaedic & Trauma Surgeon

Common Questions

Frequently Asked

Not sure which treatment is right for you?

Book a consultation with Dr. Vipin Reddy and get a personalised treatment plan.

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