| Literature DB >> 27608681 |
Timothy L Miller1,2, Thomas M Best3,4.
Abstract
Stress fractures and other bony stress injuries occur along a spectrum of severity which can impact treatment and prognosis. When treating these injuries, it should be borne in mind that no two stress fractures behave exactly alike. Given that they are not a consistent injury, standardized treatment protocols can be challenging to develop. Treatment should be individualized to the patient or athlete, the causative activity, the anatomical site, and the severity of the injury. A holistic approach to the treatment of the most difficult stress fractures should be taken by orthopedists and sports medicine specialists. This approach is necessary to obtain optimal outcomes, minimize loss of fitness and time away from sports participation, and decrease the risk of recurrence.Entities:
Keywords: Bone; Fracture; Insufficiency fracture; March fracture; Overuse injury; Stress fracture; Stress injury; Stress reaction; Stress response; Tibia
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27608681 PMCID: PMC5016928 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-016-0431-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Differential diagnoses for stress fractures
| Tumor |
High-risk stress fracture sites [22]
| Olecranon |
Fig. 1Athlete demonstrates a single-leg hop test. The athlete is asked to perform three hops in which the foot completely leaves the ground
Fig. 2Scaphoid view radiograph of the left wrist in a gymnast with continued radial wrist pain demonstrating grade III scaphoid waist stress fracture
Fig. 3Three-dimensional CT scan of the right foot demonstrating grade III stress fracture of the central one third of the dorsal navicular
Fig. 4T2 sagittal MRI of the ankle demonstrating grade II stress fracture/stress reaction of the talar neck
Kaeding-Miller stress fracture classification system [1]
| Grade | Pain | Radiographic findings (CT, MRI, bone scan, or X-ray) |
|---|---|---|
| I | − | Imaging evidence of stress FX |
| II | + | Imaging evidence of stress FX |
| III | + | Non-displaced fracture line |
| IV | + | Displaced fracture (>2 mm) |
| V | + | Non-union |
Fig. 5Intraoperative fluoroscopic radiograph of the right hip demonstrating screw fixation of a femoral neck stress fracture
Fig. 6Post-fixation radiograph of a collegiate soccer player with medial malleolar stress fracture
Fig. 7Running gait evaluation performed via aquatic treadmill in a male distance runner