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Journal Article

Citation

Rodrigues-Pinto R, Kurd MF, Schroeder GD, Kepler CK, Krieg JC, Holstein JH, Bellabarba C, Firoozabadi R, Oner FC, Kandziora F, Dvorak MF, Kleweno CP, Vialle LR, Rajasekaran S, Schnake KJ, Vaccaro AR. Global Spine J. 2017; 7(7): 609-616.

Affiliation

Rothman Institute, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Georg Thieme Publishers)

DOI

10.1177/2192568217701097

PMID

28989838

PMCID

PMC5624377

Abstract

STUDY DESIGN: Literature review.

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this review is to describe the injuries associated with sacral fractures and to analyze their impact on patient outcome.

METHODS: A comprehensive narrative review of the literature was performed to identify the injuries associated with sacral fractures.

RESULTS: Sacral fractures are uncommon injuries that result from high-energy trauma, and that, due to their rarity, are frequently underdiagnosed and mistreated. Only 5% of sacral fractures occur in isolation. Injuries most often associated with sacral fractures include neurologic injuries (present in up to 50% of sacral fractures), pelvic ring disruptions, hip and lumbar spine fractures, active pelvic/ abdominal bleeding and the presence of an open fracture or significant soft tissue injury. Diagnosis of pelvic ring fractures and fractures extending to the lumbar spine are key factors for the appropriate management of sacral fractures. Importantly, associated systemic (cranial, thoracic, and abdominopelvic) or musculoskeletal injuries should be promptly assessed and addressed. These associated injuries often dictate the management and eventual outcome of sacral fractures and, therefore, any treatment algorithm should take them into consideration.

CONCLUSIONS: Sacral fractures are complex in nature and often associated with other often-missed injuries. This review summarizes the most relevant associated injuries in sacral fractures and discusses on their appropriate management.


Language: en

Keywords

associated injuries; diagnosis; management; musculoskeletal injuries; neurologic injuries; sacral fractures; systemic injuries

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