2.7 Ankle Fractures COPY Flashcards
What has happened in a wedge fracture of the thoracolumbar spine?
How do you classify the stability?
Anterior part of body collapses leaving posterior part intact.
Often fragility fracture in elderly.
Denis classification for spinal fractures. Divide spine into 3 columns, if only one column is fracture then is it considered to be stable.
(posterior complex, middle component, anterior column)
History and exam finding in fragility fractures of the thoracolumbar spine (aka wedge fracture)?
Investigations?
- elderly patient fallen from standing height
- acute onset low back pain
- pain well localised and limits movement
- neuro exam should be normal, some radicular pain over dermatome
X-ray is best but:
- hard to tell if its old or new fracture
- hard to tell osteoporotic vs metastasis
CT can be used to:
- help grade stability (Denis)
- retropulsion of fragments into spinal cord
MRI for:
- more info about soft tissues
- especially if there are neurological features
Management of a wedge fracture?
- traditionally its conservative
- early mobilisation and analgesia help this succeed
- some evidence for thoracolumbar support braces
KYPHOPLASTY has become a more recent option
- percutaneous injection of cement
- GA or local anaesthetic
- stabilises anterior column = pain relief and quicker return to function.
C-spine injury can happen in all age groups. What imaging would you use?
- traditionally plain xray but this isn’t very useful
- AP and a lateral, may need “swimmers view” in short necks
- “peg view” take through the open mouth
TRAUMA:
- CT is initial imaging
- from vertex to symphsis
- if neuro involvement then also MRI