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J Trauma Inj : Journal of Trauma and Injury

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2 "Fracture reduction"
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Case Reports
An Irreducible Hip Dislocation with Femoral Head Fracture
Tae-Seong Kim, Chang-Wug Oh, Joon-Woo Kim, Kyeong-Hyeon Park
J Trauma Inj. 2018;31(3):181-188.   Published online December 31, 2018
DOI: https://doi.org/10.20408/jti.2018.026
  • 7,488 View
  • 128 Download
  • 1 Citations
AbstractAbstract PDF

Urgent reduction is required in cases of traumatic hip dislocation to reduce the risk of avascular necrosis of the femoral head. However, in cases of femoral head fractures, the dislocated hip cannot be reduced easily, and in some cases, it can even be irreducible. This irreducibility may provoke further incidental iatrogenic fractures of the femoral neck. In an irreducible hip dislocation, without further attempting for closed reduction, an immediate open reduction is recommended. This can prevent iatrogenic femoral neck fracture or avascular necrosis of the femoral head, and save the natural hip joint.

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Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Safety and efficacy of surgical hip dislocation in managing femoral head fractures: A systematic review and meta-analysis
    Ahmed A Khalifa, Mohamed A Haridy, Ali Fergany
    World Journal of Orthopedics.2021; 12(8): 604.     CrossRef
Indirect Reduction and Spinal Canal Remodeling through Ligamentotaxis for Lumbar Burst Fracture
Wu Seong Kang, Jung Chul Kim, Ik Sun Choi, Sung Kyu Kim
J Trauma Inj. 2017;30(4):212-215.   Published online December 30, 2017
DOI: https://doi.org/10.20408/jti.2017.30.4.212
  • 5,489 View
  • 66 Download
AbstractAbstract PDF

The choice of the most appropriate treatment for thoracolumbar or lumbar spine burst fracture remains controversial from conservative treatment to fusion through a posterior or anterior approach. There are many cases where ligamentotaxis is used to reduce the burst fracture. However, indirect reduction using ligamentotaxis is often limited in the magnitude of the reduction that it can achieve. In our patient with severe burst fracture, we were able to restore an almost normal level of vertebral height and secure spinal canal widening by using only ligamentotaxis by posterior instrumentation. Before the operation, the patient had more than 95% encroachment of the spinal canal. This was reduced to less than 10% after treatment.

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J Trauma Inj : Journal of Trauma and Injury