In the management of a
Purpose of study:. The presence of an L5 transverse process fracture is reported in many texts to be a marker of
Severe military pelvic trauma has a high mortality rate with previous work identifying an association between
The management of
Aims. The best method of treating unstable
Background.
Aims: To evaluate need for fast and correct diagnosis of
Exsanguination is the second most common cause
of death in patients who suffer severe trauma. The management of
haemodynamically unstable high-energy pelvic injuries remains controversial,
as there are no universally accepted guidelines to direct surgeons
on the ideal use of pelvic packing or early angio-embolisation.
Additionally, the optimal resuscitation strategy, which prevents
or halts the progression of the trauma-induced coagulopathy, remains
unknown. Although early and aggressive use of blood products in
these patients appears to improve survival, over-enthusiastic resuscitative
measures may not be the safest strategy. . This paper provides an overview of the classification of pelvic
injuries and the current evidence on best-practice management of
high-energy
Introduction: L5/S1 injuries can be associated with
We describe the impact of a targeted performance
improvement programme and the associated performance improvement
interventions, on mortality rates, error rates and process of care
for haemodynamically unstable patients with
Introduction: Patients with complex
Injuries to the lower urinary tract are well recognized following fractures to the pelvic ring. The overall incidence of
Introduction.
Introduction: Displaced fractures of the pelvic ring represents challenge for the trauma surgeon. Patients: From January 1999 to December 2006, the treatment was given to 134 patients (81 males, 53 females, aged 18–73 years) with pelvic ring fracture and dislocation. According to the AO (1988) classification, B type were 95, C type were 39 in cases. Surgical technique: Closed reduction and retention of unstable pelvic injuries (type B and C injuries), in order to restore the form and function of the posterior pelvis by percutaneous iliosacral screw and when is necessary antegrad screw fixation of the anterior pelvic ring osteosynthesis, using conventional fluoroscopy. 134 patients with a posterior
The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to gather epidemiological information on selected musculoskeletal injuries and to provide pooled injury-specific incidence rates. PubMed (National Library of Medicine) and Scopus (Elsevier) databases were searched. Articles were eligible for inclusion if they reported incidence rate (or count with population at risk), contained data on adult population, and were written in English language. The number of cases and population at risk were collected, and the pooled incidence rates (per 100,000 person-years) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated by using either a fixed or random effects model.Aims
Methods
The identification of high-risk factors in patients with fractures of the pelvis at the time of presentation would facilitate investigation and management. In a series of 174 consecutive patients with unstable fractures of the pelvic ring, clinical data were used to calculate the injury severity score (ISS), the triage-revised trauma score (T-RTS), and the Glasgow coma scale (GCS). The morphology of the fracture was classified according to the AO system and that of Burgess et al. The data were analysed using univariate and multivariate methods in order to determine which presenting features were identified with high risk. Univariate analysis showed an association between mortality and an ISS over 25, a T-RTS below eight, age over 65 years, systolic blood pressure under 100 mmHg, a GCS of less than 8, blood transfusion of more than ten units in the first 24 hours and colloid infusion of more than six litres in the first 24 hours. Multivariate analysis showed that age, T-RTS and ISS were independent determinants of mortality. A T-RTS of eight or less identified the cohort of patients at greatest risk (65%). The morphology of the fracture was not predictive of mortality. We recommend the use of the T-RTS in the acute situation in order to identify patients at high risk.
A system for assessment of function after major pelvic injuries is proposed. This numerical system developed from a five-year prospective study of 60 patients. Five factors were assessed and scored: pain, standing, sitting, sexual intercourse and work performance. The total score then gave a clinical grade as excellent, good, fair or poor. The scoring system allows comparison between early and late results and also between various methods of treatment.
1. A case of fractured pelvis with massive haemorrhage from the right superior gluteal artery and thrombosis of the right ilio-femoral venous system is reported. 2. The treatment included ligature of the artery and extensive thrombectomy. Ten litres of blood were transfused.
Evidence that L5 transverse process fracture indicates pelvic instability is insufficient and controversial. Because of unstable