| Literature DB >> 35674913 |
Chien Han Chen1, Fang Chieh Lien2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The aim of the study was to introduce an innovative technique involving the use of a subcutaneous anterior pelvic bridge (SAPB) in the treatment of selective acetabular fractures.Entities:
Keywords: Acetabular fracture; Anterior pelvic internal fixation; Minimally invasive; Pelvic bridge technique; Percutaneous anterior pelvic bridge; Subcutaneous anterior pelvic bridge
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35674913 PMCID: PMC9174027 DOI: 10.1007/s00264-022-05460-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Orthop ISSN: 0341-2695 Impact factor: 3.479
Fig. 1a Anterior wall fracture 62A3.1 (no. 16). b Left very low anterior column fracture 62A3.3 (no. 17). c Transverse fracture 62B3.3 (no. 1). d Both column fracture 62C1 (no. 9). e Non-displaced acetabular fracture 62A3.1 (no. 20)
Fig. 2a Pre-bending of the plate to fit onto the iliac crest and contralateral pubic tubercle. b Skin incision and wound deepened superficial to abdominal fascia. c Subcutaneous tunnel created between iliac crest and pubic symphysis. d Postoperative image after 6 months of plate implantation
Clinical and radiological workup of patients with acetabular fractures
| No | Sex/age (years) | AO/OTA classification | Postoperative reduction | Associated injuries | BMI | Complications | Removal of implant | Final radiological outcome | Final d’Aubigné and Postel scores |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Male, 26 | 62B3.3 | Anatomical | Tibial I/L | 26 | - | - | Excellent | 18, excellent |
| 2 | Male, 82 | 62C2e | Anatomical | PR I/L | 18 | Transient LFCN | - | Good Traumatic OA | 15, good |
| 3 | Female, 37 | 62C3.1e | Imperfect | - | 26 | Loss of reduction | - | Good | 16, good |
| 4 | Female, 60 | 62A3.3 61C1.3 | Anatomical | Sacrum C/L | 27 | Morel–Lavallee lesion Transient LFCN | 12 months | I/L excellent C/L poor | 13, fair |
| 5 | Male, 35 | 62B2.2 | Anatomical | Knee avulsion I/L | 25 | Transient LFCN | 7 months | Excellent | 17, excellent |
| 6 | Female, 48 | 62A3.1 61C1.2 | Anatomical | Ilium, FN, I/L T11 chance | 23 | - | 6 months | Excellent | 16, good |
| 7 | Male, 52 | 62C3 | Anatomical | Toe amputation, ilium, dislocated hip I/L | 27 | AVN (THR) | 3 months | Excellent | 13, fair |
| 8 | Male, 22 | 62C3b | Anatomical | Ilium, PR I/L | 28 | Transient LFCN | - | Excellent | 18, excellent |
| 9 | Male, 28 | 62C1 right 61C3.2a + d left | Anatomical | Ilium I/L, PR I/L, PR C/L, FS B/L | 29 | - | 6 months | Good | 16, good |
| 10 | Female, 54 | 62A3.1 | Anatomical | Sacrum I/L, Toe | 23 | - | 15 months | Good | 18, excellent |
| 11 | Male, 69 | 62B2.2 | Anatomical | - | 18 | - | - | Good | 18, excellent |
| 12 | Female, 65 | 62A3.3, 61B2.1a | Anatomical | PR, Sacrum I/L | 23 | Transient LFCN | 20 months | Good | 15, good |
| 13 | Male, 68 | 62B2.2 | Anatomical | PR C/L | 31 | Transient LFCN | - | Good Poor C/L | 15, good |
| 14 | Female, 56 | 62B3.3 | Anatomical | Ribs C/L FN, Tibial I/L | 25 | - | - | Good | 18, excellent |
| 15 | Female, 53 | 62A3.3 | Anatomical | L1, Sacrum I/L | 28 | - | 12 months | Good | 17, excellent |
| 16 | Male, 64 | 62A3.1 | Anatomical | Sacrum I/L PR C/L | 25 | - | - | Good | 18, excellent |
| 17 | Female, 24 | 62A3.3 61C3.1 | Anatomical | Sacrum B/L PR C/L | 27 | - | - | Excellent | 18, excellent |
| 18 | Female, 21 | 62A3.1, 61C1.3 | Non-displaced | Sacrum I/L | 19 | - | 7 months | Non-displaced | 18, excellent |
| 19 | Male, 17 | 62A3.3, 61B1.2 | Non-displaced | FS I/L | 18 | - | 18 months | Non-displaced | 18, excellent |
| 20 | Female, 19 | 62A3.1 61C3.1 C/L | Non-displaced | PR, Sacrum C/L | 17 | - | 12 months | Non-displaced | 18, excellent |
| 21 | Female, 30 | 62A3.1 61C3.1 | Non-displaced | Clavicle, PR C/L | 21 | Transient LFCN | 6 months | Non-displaced | 15, good |
BMI body mass index, FN femoral neck, FS femoral shaft, PR pubic ramus, IW iliac wing, B/L bilateral, C/L contralateral, I/L ipsilateral, LFCN lateral femoral cutaneous nerve, AVN avascular necrosis, THR total hip replacement
Radiological and functional outcomes of patients at final follow-up
| Fracture reduction | Radiological outcome | Functional outcome | AVN | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent | Good | Fair | Poor | Excellent | Good | Fair | Poor | ||
| Anatomical ( | 7 | 9 | - | - | 9 | 5 | 2 | - | 1 |
| Imperfect ( | - | 1 | - | - | - | 1 | - | - | - |
| Non-displaced ( | 4 | - | - | - | 3 | 1 | - | - | - |
AVN avascular necrosis
Fig. 3a Post-operative radiographs of a 28-year-old man (no. 9) showing right iliac wing fracture, right acetabular both column fracture, left superior and inferior pubic rami fracture, pubic symphysis diastasis, and bilateral femoral open fracture showing anatomical reduction. b AP radiographs after removal of SAPB showing excellent radiological outcome with excellent functional outcome
Fig. 4a Pre-operative AP radiographs of a 60-year-old woman with history of left THR (no. 4), showing left low anterior column fracture with right saddle type pubis fracture and sacral zone II fracture. b Post-operative AP radiograph showing anatomical reduction. c AP radiographs after removal of implants showing poor radiological outcome on right side pubic ramus but excellent radiological outcome on left hip
Fig. 5a Post-operative Judet view radiographs of a 52-year-old man (no. 7) showing reduction of left ilium wing, left acetabular (two-column) central complex fracture with dislocated left hip joint and split femoral head fracture. b Pelvis AP and Judet view radiographs after 3 months of surgery showing signs of avascular necrosis and subcapital fracture. e AP radiograph after total hip replacement and removal of SAPB showing excellent radiological outcome but fair functional outcome