When a broken hip becomes something more
An 83-year-old man fell and broke his hip. It's one of the most common injuries in older adults — and one of the most dangerous.
Surgery was scheduled to fix the fracture. Standard procedure.
But during the operation, surgeons found something unexpected: a torn vein deep in the thigh, right next to where a loose piece of bone had settled.
Why hip fractures are already a high-stakes surgery
Hip fractures affect hundreds of thousands of older adults each year. The surgery itself is well-practiced and usually safe.
Still, complications exist. Blood clots, infections, and blood loss top the usual list.
Vein injury is rare. Serious blood vessel injury during hip fracture surgery shows up only occasionally in the medical literature — and when it does, most reports focus on arteries, not veins.
The risk hiding beside the bone
Your thigh has a major blood highway running through it. The profunda femoris vein is one of the big drains that carries blood back up to the heart from your leg.
It sits deep, close to the femur — your thigh bone. Normally, that closeness is fine. The body's anatomy keeps everything where it should be.
But when a hip fracture happens, a small chunk of bone called the "lesser trochanter" can snap off and shift. If it lands in the wrong spot — nudged right against the vein — the situation changes.
That's exactly what happened here.
How the team almost missed it
Before surgery, the patient got both a CT scan and a Doppler ultrasound. CT showed the bone fragment sitting in direct contact with the vein. Doppler — the ultrasound that checks blood flow — came back negative, meaning blood was still moving normally.
Based on Doppler alone, nothing looked urgent.
But the surgeons noticed what the CT showed. That extra attention changed how they approached the operation.
Think of it like renovating a kitchen. The plumbing diagram says the pipe is right behind a wall you need to cut. Even if there's no leak yet, you proceed very carefully.
What happened in the operating room
During surgical exploration, the team found a 3-millimeter tear in the profunda femoris vein — about the width of a pencil lead.
They repaired the vein. They removed the bone fragment. Then they fixed the fracture using a standard intramedullary nail — a metal rod that goes inside the bone.
Without that careful look, the tear might have been missed, or worse, made bigger during routine fracture fixation.
What this case teaches
After surgery, the patient developed a deep vein thrombosis — a blood clot in the leg. This is a known risk after major leg surgery, especially when a vein has been injured.
Doctors managed it with an inferior vena cava filter (a small device placed in a big vein to catch clots before they reach the lungs) and blood thinners.
The patient survived the surgery. The outcome could have looked very different without the preoperative CT review.
If you or someone you love is heading into hip fracture surgery, here's the practical takeaway: preoperative imaging isn't just a formality.
CT scans show the 3D relationship between bone fragments and nearby blood vessels. Doppler ultrasound shows whether blood is flowing normally — but it can miss anatomy that's dangerously positioned without yet being damaged.
Both matter. And surgeons who take the extra minutes to review them carefully make safer operations.
What to ask the care team
You don't need to second-guess your surgeon. But reasonable questions include:
- What imaging am I getting before surgery, and what will it show?
- Are there any features of my fracture that raise specific risks?
- What's the plan if something unexpected is found during surgery?
A good surgical team welcomes these questions. They're part of informed care.
Honest limits of a single case
This is one patient. Case reports can't tell us how often this happens or whether changes to routine practice are needed.
It also can't establish that every lesser trochanter fragment needs detailed vascular imaging. Most don't cause problems.
What it does do is flag a real risk pattern — a displaced fragment sitting against a major vein — that surgeons and radiologists should keep in mind when reviewing scans.
Cases like this slowly build the medical literature. A single report raises awareness. Two or three more may prompt a formal review of imaging protocols.
Eventually, if enough cases accumulate, professional societies may issue clearer guidance on when extra vascular imaging is warranted for specific fracture patterns.
For now, the lesson is simple: in surgery, what looks routine isn't always. And a few extra minutes with the scans can make all the difference.