pelvic injury
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Injury ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daren Forward ◽  
Rahul Vaidya ◽  
Richard Buckley

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
ibrahim alper yavuz ◽  
tahsin aydın ◽  
ahmet ozgur yildirim

Abstract Introduction: Sacroiliac joint separation is a life-threatening serious condition in pelvic injuries. It should be diagnosed early and treated properly. Although these injuries can often be detected by imaging methods, in some cases, it is not diagnosed. Case presentation: We report a rare case of pelvic injury with sacroiliac separation during surgery, while the sacroiliac joint was completely normal on X-ray and CT and no pelvic binder was used in the patient. The sacroiliac separation noticed during the operation was fixed with a sacroiliac screw. Conclusion: Pelvic injuries, especially ligament injuries, may not be detected on both physical examination, direct radiography, and CT.


2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 187-190
Author(s):  
Min Jae Gal ◽  
Jung Chul Kim

A 91-year-old female presented to Chonnam National University Hospital Regional Trauma Center with a lateral compression type III fracture of the pelvis. She was managed non-operatively for a week in the intensive care unit under close observation and had an emergency operation due to delayed onset of an acute obstructed direct inguinal hernia. Traumatic abdominal wall hernias are rare. However, trauma surgeons should always be aware of the possibility of such injuries because of their critical consequences.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (19) ◽  
pp. 4348
Author(s):  
Christian Kleber ◽  
Mirja Haussmann ◽  
Michael Hetz ◽  
Michael Tsokos ◽  
Claas T. Buschmann

Unstable pelvic injuries are rare (3–8% of all fractures) but are associated with a mortality of up to 30%. An effective way to treat venous and cancellous sources of bleeding prehospital is to reduce intrapelvic volume with external noninvasive pelvic stabilizers. Scientifically reliable data regarding pelvic volume reduction and applicable pressure are lacking. Epidemiologic data were collected, and multiple post-mortem CT scans and biomechanical measurements were performed on real, unstable pelvic injuries. Unstable pelvic injury was shown to be the leading source of bleeding in only 19%. All external non-invasive pelvic stabilizers achieved intrapelvic volume reduction; the T-POD® succeeded best on average (333 ± 234 cm3), but with higher average peak traction (110N). The reduction results of the VBM® pneumatic pelvic sling consistently showed significantly better results at a pressure of 200 mmHg than at 100 mmHg at similar peak traction forces. All pelvic stabilizers exhibited the highest peak tensile force shortly after application. Unstable pelvic injuries must be considered as an indicator of serious concomitant injuries. Stabilization should be performed prehospital with specific pelvic stabilizers, such as the T-POD® or the VBM® pneumatic pelvic sling. We recommend adjusting the pressure recommendation of the VBM® pneumatic pelvic sling to 200 mmHg.


Author(s):  
Felix Erne ◽  
Daniel Dehncke ◽  
Steven C. Herath ◽  
Fabian Springer ◽  
Nico Pfeifer ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Fracture detection by artificial intelligence and especially Deep Convolutional Neural Networks (DCNN) is a topic of growing interest in current orthopaedic and radiological research. As learning a DCNN usually needs a large amount of training data, mostly frequent fractures as well as conventional X-ray are used. Therefore, less common fractures like acetabular fractures (AF) are underrepresented in the literature. The aim of this pilot study was to establish a DCNN for detection of AF using computer tomography (CT) scans. Methods Patients with an acetabular fracture were identified from the monocentric consecutive pelvic injury registry at the BG Trauma Center XXX from 01/2003 – 12/2019. All patients with unilateral AF and CT scans available in DICOM-format were included for further processing. All datasets were automatically anonymised and digitally post-processed. Extraction of the relevant region of interests was performed and the technique of data augmentation (DA) was implemented to artificially increase the number of training samples. A DCNN based on Med3D was used for autonomous fracture detection, using global average pooling (GAP) to reduce overfitting. Results From a total of 2,340 patients with a pelvic fracture, 654 patients suffered from an AF. After screening and post-processing of the datasets, a total of 159 datasets were enrolled for training of the algorithm. A random assignment into training datasets (80%) and test datasets (20%) was performed. The technique of bone area extraction, DA and GAP increased the accuracy of fracture detection from 58.8% (native DCNN) up to an accuracy of 82.8% despite the low number of datasets. Conclusion The accuracy of fracture detection of our trained DCNN is comparable to published values despite the low number of training datasets. The techniques of bone extraction, DA and GAP are useful for increasing the detection rates of rare fractures by a DCNN. Based on the used DCNN in combination with the described techniques from this pilot study, the possibility of an automatic fracture classification of AF is under investigation in a multicentre study.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. e241542
Author(s):  
Joost H Kuipers ◽  
P Koen Bos ◽  
Duncan E Meuffels

A 35-year old dockworker sustained a pelvic injury when he was caught by a large loading clamshell grab. Primary survey revealed an open book pelvic fracture with soft tissue defects of the left thigh and groin. CT scanning of the thorax and abdomen did not reveal significant additional injuries. Partly due to patient’s haemodynamical instability, osteosynthesis of the pelvic fracture was performed immediately after resuscitation, whereby the severely contaminated wound of the thigh was debrided and irrigated. The following days, progressive facial subcutaneous emphysema developed, but patient remained clinically stable. Several specialists were consulted, but did not find a cause. At day 7, a second surgery was planned to treat a pelvic surgical wound infection. Unexpectedly, we found faecal contamination in the pelvic surgical wound. The consulted gastro/intestinal-surgeon performed a laparoscopic colostomy for a rectal laceration. Awareness for bowel injuries with open pelvic fracture should be high, also when subcutaneous emphysema is found remotely.


Author(s):  
Arnold J. Suda ◽  
Lisa Helm ◽  
Udo Obertacke

Abstract Purpose Stability of the dorsal pelvic ring is important for patient mobilisation and can be restored using several surgical procedures after fracture. Placement of percutaneous iliosacral screws is a reliable and minimal-invasive technique to achieve stabilisation of the dorsal pelvic ring by placement of two screws in the first sacral vertebra. Aim of this study was to evaluate 3D CT scans regarding the anatomical possibility to place two 7.3 mm iliosacral screws for fixation of the dorsal pelvic ring. Methods 3D CT datasets of 500 consecutive trauma patients with 1000 hemipelves of a mid-european level I trauma centre with or without pelvic injury were evaluated and measured bilaterally in this retrospective study. Results One thousand hemipelvic datasets of 500 patients (157 females, 343 males) with a mean age of 49.7 years (18 to 95) were included in this study. Only 16 hemipelves (1.6%, 11 in females, 5 in males) in 14 patients (2.8%, 9 females = 5.73%, 5 males = 1.5%) showed too narrow corridors so that 7.3 mm screw placement would not be possible (p = 0.001). In women, too narrow corridors occurred 3.9 times as often as in men. Only two females showed this bilaterally. Conclusion The evaluation of 3D CT scans of the pelvis showed the importance of planning iliosacral screw placement, especially if two 7.3 mm screws are intended to be placed in the first sacral vertebra.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takahito Miyake ◽  
Hideshi Okada ◽  
Takuma Ishihara ◽  
Norihide Kanda ◽  
Yosuke Mizuno ◽  
...  

Abstract Early administration of hemostasis strategies, such as transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE), is critical in pelvic injury patients because they often experience hemorrhagic shock and other fatal injuries. We investigated the influence of delays in TAE administration on mortality. Patients admitted to the Advanced Critical Care Center at Gifu University with pelvic injury between January 2008 and December 2019 who underwent acute TAE were retrospectively enrolled. The time from when the doctor decided to administer TAE to the start of TAE (needling time) was defined as “decision-TAE time.” We included 162 patients. The median decision-TAE time was 59.5 min. Twenty-five patients died. Kaplan-Meier curves for overall survival were compared, with a significant difference observed between the patients above and below the median cutoff value for decision-TAE time (p=0.02). The age and sex-adjusted multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression model revealed that the longer the decision-TAE time, the higher the risk of mortality (p=0.01). The interaction between TAE duration (procedure time) and decision-TAE time was statistically significant (p=0.044), indicating that TAE duration modified the effect of decision-TAE time on mortality. Decision-TAE time may play a key role in establishing resuscitation in pelvic fracture patients, and efforts to shorten this time should be pursued.


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