| Literature DB >> 33937427 |
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33937427 PMCID: PMC8062895 DOI: 10.30476/beat.2021.86642
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull Emerg Trauma ISSN: 2322-2522
Fig. 1Distraction fracture in an 88-year-old women. She presented with a femoral fracture and spinal pain was reported in the clinical course. Radiography (on the left) shows signs of DISH, old compression fractures and an interruption of the ventral cortex of TH 11. The correlating CT (on the left) shows the complex distraction injury of the thoracolumbar junction and the old compression fractures
Fig. 4Fracture in a 70-year-old men with known ankylosing spondylitis. Radiography (on the left) shows only a very subtle kinking at the ventral cortex of TH 11. The CT-scan (on the right) confirms this finding