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- Acetabular Fractures: Types, Treatment Complications
An acetabular fracture is a break in your hip socket Acetabular fractures usually require surgery Complications such as hip arthritis can occur
- Acetabulum: What Is It, Function, Fractures, and More | Osmosis
The acetabulum is a large socket on the lateral face of the hip bone that articulates with the head of the femur to form the hip joint Anatomically, the acetabulum is formed by the fusion of the three pelvic bones: the ilium, ischium, and pubis The ilium forms the upper boundary of the acetabulum, the ischium contributes to the posterior wall, and the pubis forms the anterior wall In
- Acetabular Fractures - Trauma - Orthobullets
Summary Acetabulum fractures are pelvis fractures that involve the articular surface of the hip joint and may involve one or two columns, one or two walls, or the roof within the pelvis Diagnosis can be made radiographically with dedicated pelvis radiographs (including Judet views) but frequently require CT pelvis for surgical planning
- Posterior Wall Acetabular Fracture (Broken Hip Socket)
Surgery can be long, and you might need a blood transfusion Figure 5: X-ray of a smaller posterior wall acetabular fracture fixed with small plates, screws, and pins Figure 6: X-ray of a hip socket fracture (posterior wall) that was treated with a larger plate and screws
- Acetabular Fractures - OrthoInfo - AAOS
An acetabular fracture is a break in the socket portion of the "ball-and-socket" hip joint These hip socket fractures are not common — they occur much less frequently than fractures of the upper femur or femoral head (the "ball" portion of the joint)
- Acetabular fracture | Radiology Reference . . . - Radiopaedia. org
These include: iliac oblique view for the posterior pelvic column and anterior acetabular wall obturator oblique view for the anterior pelvic column and posterior acetabular wall CT CT has revolutionised the diagnosis, enabling precise delineation of the fracture configuration and assessment of any articular surface disruption
- Posterior Wall Acetabular Fractures: Current Concepts Review
Posterior wall acetabular fractures are the most common acetabular fracture pattern and require prompt recognition, particularly if associated with a hip dislocation
- Acetabulum Fracture - Physiopedia
The acetabulum is the large cup-shaped cavity on the anterolateral aspect of the pelvis that articulates with the head of the femur to form the hip joint Acetabular fractures (a type of pelvic fracture), possibly involving the ilium, ischium or pubis depending on fracture configuration
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