Purpose. To evaluate the use of cutaneous marking of the sacrum for percutaneous
Objectives. Percutaneous
There has been a trend towards operative management of pelvic injuries. Posterior pelvic integrity is more important for functional recovery. Percutaneous
Introduction We present prospective and retrospective reviews of sacral nonunions treated with posterior tension band plate and
Minimally invasive placement of
Introduction: Percutaneous
The royal victoria hospital is a tertiary trauma centre receiving pelvic injury referrals for a population of 1.7 million. The use of ilio-sacral screw fixation with low anterior frame stabilisation has been adopted as the principle treatment for unstable pelvic ring injuries in our institution. We aim to describe our practice and outcomes following the use of percutaneous screw fixation of the pelvis. The review included standardised assessment of health-related quality of life (SF-36) as well as the Iowa pelvic score and Majeed pelvic injury outcome scores. Data was also collected on associated injuries, post-operative complications, nerve injury and pain scores. A total case series of 45 patients undergoing percutaneous ilio-sacral screw fixation following traumatic pelvic injury were identified over a 5 year period. Of these 23 were contactable to follow-up or responded to questionnaire review. The mean follow up was 680 days (range 151–1962). The mean age was 33 (range 18–57). The mean SF-36 physical and mental scores were 38 and 46 respectively. The mean Majeed score was 69 and Iowa pelvic score was 65. The mean pain score was 3.5 (range 0–7). There were no incidences of deep infection, post-operative PE or nerve injury related to screw insertion. Patients with isolated pelvic injuries performed better on outcome scoring however the low SF-36 scores highlight the severity of pelvic injuries
Dysmorphic pelves are a known risk factor for malpositioned
Percutaneous fluoroscopically asseisted
Introduction and Aims: Surgical correction of pelvic obliquity is an important component of spinal instrumentation for neuromuscular scoliosis, though instrumentation to the pelvis has high reported complication rates. This study evaluates the results of pelvic fixation during surgical correction of neuromuscular scoliosis in a consecutive series of 62 children and adolescents. Method: A retrospective chart and radiographic review of 62 consecutive patients treated with spinal fusions to the pelvis as treatment for neuromuscular scoliosis was performed. Follow-up ranged from two to seven years. Diagnoses included cerebral palsy (36 patients), muscular dystrophy (16 patients), myelomeningocele (three patients), spinal muscular atrophy (three patients) and other disorders (four patients). Mean age at surgery was 13.5 years. Pelvic fixation techniques used included Luque-Galveston or
INTRODUCTION. Isolated injuries of the sacral bone are rare. The pathomechanism of these injuries are usually high velocity accidents or falls from large heights. The computer-assisted implantation of
Percutaneous fixation with
Percutaneous fluoroscopically assisted
Background: Treatment of patients with partially or totally unstable pelvic ring disruptions includes primary anterior stabilization with an external fixator and additional posterior internal fixation.
Background. The suicidal jumper's fracture of the pelvis is a special form of sacrum fractures associated with high energy trauma. The typical H-type fracture pattern runs transforaminal on both sides with a connecting transverse component between S1 and S3. Due to the high-grade instability operative treatment is imperative. Aim of this study was to compare
Purpose: We present a prospective review of 30 unstable pelvic ring fractures treated with
Aims: Various techniques for the þxation of the posterior pelvis have been used, each demonstrating drawbacks speciþc to the technique. In this study, a new protocol was described and evaluated, involving the placement of posterior pelvic screws in the computed tomography (CT) room. Methods: Between September 2001 and September 2002, sixteen patients with unstable pelvic ring injuries were stabilized with
Aim: The outcome of pelvic fractures are dependent on the anatomic reduction and stabilization of these fractures. Treatment of these fractures evolved recently and percutaneous treatment became the choice of treatment in most cases. The aim of this study is to evaluate the outcome of percutaneous treatment of unstable pelvic fractures. Material and Methods: Twenty patients (11 female, 9 male) who had unstable pelvic fractures treated percutaneously between August 2004 and August 2006 formed the basis of study. Hospital charts, pre and postoperative PA, inlet and outlet pelvis X-rays, computed tomographies evaluated. Fractures are classified according to Young and Burgess and Injury severity scores(ISS) were calculated. SF-36 health related outcome scores, Majeed scores, Iowa Pelvic scores and Pelvic outcome scores (that also evaluates postoperative X-rays for residual anterior and posterior displacement) were calculated for the assesment of outcome. Results: The mean age of the patients were 32(11–66) The minimum follow-up was 2 years with a mean of 33,3(24–48). Mean ISS was 31(16–50). Five patients have APC type 3, 3 patients have APC type 2, 3 patients have LC type 2, 4 patients have LC type 3, 4 patients have VS ve 2 patients have CM type injuries.
Purpose: This study analysed nerve trunk injury associated with posterior fractures of the pelvic girdle, distinguishing initial post-trauma damage from morbidity correlated to treatment by reduction and
Traditionally, unstable anterior pelvic ring injuries have been stabilised with an external fixator or by internal fixation. Recently, a new percutaneous technique of placement of bilateral supraacetabular polyaxial screws and subcutaneous connecting bar to assemble an “internal fixator” has been described. We present the surgical technique and early clinical results of using this technique in twenty-five consecutive patients with a rotationally unstable pelvic ring injury and no diastasis of the symphysis pubis treated between April 2010 and December 2013. Additional posterior pelvic stabilisation with percutaneous