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Lateral Compression Fragility Fractures of the Pelvis: Diagnosis, Classifications, and Modern Management

  • Open Access
  • 23-09-2024
  • REVIEW
Published in:

Abstract

Purpose of Review

To describe the diagnosis, classification, and modern management of lateral compression fragility fractures of the pelvis.

Recent Findings

Practice patterns are shifting toward early operative treatment of fragility fractures of the pelvis among patients who are unable to mobilize or whose injuries demonstrate occult instability on stress imaging. Early internal fixation appears to decrease pain, facilitate mobilization, accelerate hospital discharge, and minimize morbidity in this population.

Summary

Lateral compression pelvic ring injuries are the most common type of fragility fracture of the pelvis. Similar to fragility fractures of the hip, lateral compression fragility fractures of the pelvis are typically sustained in a ground level fall. These injuries are associated with long acute hospital and post-acute facility admissions, loss of physical function, loss of independence, mortality, anxiety, sleep disturbance, and caregiver burnout. Unlike hip fractures, for which urgent operative treatment and early mobilization reduce mortality, lateral compression fragility fractures of the pelvis are commonly treated without surgery. Recommendations for nonoperative management of these injuries in older adults may be inappropriately generalized from studies of younger patient populations with high-energy mechanisms of pelvis fracture. However, strong evidence to support early internal fixation of these injuries practice is lacking. High quality investigations of early surgical intervention for lateral compression fragility fractures of the pelvis are needed to guide care for these patients.
Title
Lateral Compression Fragility Fractures of the Pelvis: Diagnosis, Classifications, and Modern Management
Authors
Joseph T. Patterson
Joshua A. Parry
Publication date
23-09-2024
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Current Osteoporosis Reports / Issue 6/2024
Print ISSN: 1544-1873
Electronic ISSN: 1544-2241
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11914-024-00891-1
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