| Literature DB >> 29221479 |
Andreas Höch1, Philipp Pieroh2,3, Ralf Henkelmann2, Christoph Josten2, Jörg Böhme2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The incidence of pelvic ring fractures in the elderly significantly increased. Because of persistent pain and immobilization associated with this injury, surgical treatment is recommended. To minimise comorbidities and surgical risk, percutaneous techniques are becoming more relevant. In-screw cement augmentation of sacroiliac screw fixation is a promising procedure; however, clinical follow-up data remain scarce. This study investigated the safety and possible complications of the procedure along with a 1-year follow-up.Entities:
Keywords: Fragility fracture; Pelvic fracture; Polymethylmethacrylate; Sacroiliac screw fixation; Sacrum fracture
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29221479 PMCID: PMC5723042 DOI: 10.1186/s12893-017-0330-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Surg ISSN: 1471-2482 Impact factor: 2.102
Fig. 1Study protocol, patient selection and data collection. All patients suffering from a uni- or bilateral transalar fagility fracture of the sacrum were treated primarily conservatively with physical therapy (full weight bearing) and painkillers in accordance to the World Health Organization (WHO) analgesic ladder step 2. If adequate mobilization was achieved, conservative treatment was continued. In cases of persistent immobilization the surgical treatment was indicated. Patients treated posteriorly solely by a PMMA augmented SI screw without additional posterior stabilization and independent of the anterior stabilization were asked preoperatively to participate in the present study. Data were collected at the indicated time points prospectively and reviewed retrospectively
Classification of included pelvic ring fractures according to OTA/AO and Rommens and Hofmann’s classification of fragility fractures of the pelvis (FFP) [8]
| Classification | Fracture type | Number of patients |
|---|---|---|
| OTA/AO | B 2.1 | 25 |
| B 3.3 | 8 | |
| Isolated sacral fracture | Denis I bilateral | 1 |
| FFP | FFP 2b | 11 |
| FFP 2c | 14 | |
| FFP 4b | 8 | |
| No classification possible | 1 |
Demographic data on age, sex, type of admission, comorbidities, mechanism of accident and injury pattern of the study population
| Number of patients | |
|---|---|
|
| 34 |
| Age (years) | 79 ± 8.25 (41–92) |
| Gender | 32 females, 2 males; 16:1 |
| Admission | 13 primary admission |
| 21 secondary transfer | |
| Comorbiditiesa | 1 with no comorbidities |
| 24 with ≤ 3 comorbidities | |
| 9 with > 3 comorbidities | |
| Mechanism of accident | 28 fell from a stand |
| 3 with unknown/no trauma | |
| 1 because of a traffic accident | |
| 2 fell from a height of > 3 m | |
| Injury pattern | 21 with isolated pelvic ring fracture |
| 10 with accompanying injuries (ISS < 16) | |
| 3 with multiple injured (ISS > 16) |
ahypertension, diabetes mellitus, cold, cardiac event in history, neurological event with residual
Fig. 2Surgical technique of in-screw cement-augmented SI screw fixation into S1 with the placement of the K-wire on the right position in inlet and outlet controls (a and b). Screw placement (c) and augmentation with bone-filler device in inlet and outlet views (d and e)
Fig. 3Postoperative pelvic CT of in-screw cement-augmented SI screw fixation in axial (a and b), coronal (c) and sagittal (d) views
Fig. 4Quality of life 1 year after in-screw cement-augmented SI screw fixation according to SF-12. Dotted line shows the average for an age- and gender-matched normal German population [20]. No significantly difference was found for the physical and mental score (p > 0.05)
Fig. 5Preoperative, postoperative and 1-year pain levels according to the visual analogue pain scale