EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT EVALUATION AND TREATMENT OF PELVIC FRACTURES - 05/09/11
Résumé |
Pelvic fractures are among the most serious injuries and account for 3% of all fractures.28 About 60% result from vehicular trauma (e.g. automobile, motorcycle, bicycle), 30% from falls, and 10% from crush injuries, athletic injuries, or penetrating trauma.18 , 23 Pelvic fractures are the third most commonly seen injury in fatalities due to motor vehicle accidents.24
Life-threatening hemorrhage, deformity, neurologic injury, and genitourinary (GU) injury are all potential complications that must be identified and treated early in the setting of pelvic fractures. The literature shows that the mortality rate has varied from 9% to 20% in the 1970s and has seemed to decrease in the 1980s to 6% to 10%.6 , 18 , 20 , 24 Despite this apparent decrease, pelvic fractures pose a formidable clinical challenge to the emergency physician (EP). Hemodynamically unstable patients who present to the Emergency Department (ED) with a pelvic fracture have a mortality rate of 40% to 50%.23
Many classification schemes have been proposed to try to simplify or organize the many types of pelvic fractures. These have limited value for the EP owing to their complexity and because they offer little for the immediate management of the patient. The following pages discuss pelvic anatomy and attempt to classify pelvic fractures into categories that correlate to the risk of complications and orthopedic instability.
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Address reprint requests to Marco Coppola, DO, FACEP, 2401 South 31st Street, Temple, TX 76508, e-mail: mcoppola@bellnet.tamu.edu |
Vol 18 - N° 1
P. 1-27 - février 2000 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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