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High- Versus Low-Energy Acetabular Fracture Outcomes in the Geriatric Population

Alexa Cecil, Jonathan W. Yu, Viviana Rodríguez, Adam Šíma, Jesse T. Torbert, Jibanananda Satpathy, Paul W. Perdue, Clarence B. Toney, Stephen L. Kates

2020Geriatric Orthopaedic Surgery & Rehabilitation14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: High-energy mechanisms of acetabular fracture in the geriatric population are becoming increasingly common as older adults remain active later in life. This study compared outcomes for high- versus low-energy acetabular fractures in older adults. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We studied outcomes of 22 older adults with acetabular fracture who were treated at a level-I trauma center over a 4-year period. Fourteen patients were categorized as low-energy mechanism of injury, and 8 were identified as a high-energy mechanism. We analyzed patient demographics with univariate logistic regressions performed to assess differences in high- and low-energy group as well as patient characteristics compared with surgical outcomes. RESULTS: Most high-energy mechanisms were caused by motor vehicle collision (n = 4, 50.0%), with most having posterior wall fractures (50.0%). Among patient characteristics, the mechanism of injury, hip dislocation, fracture types, and fracture gap had the largest differences between energy groups effect size (ES: 2.45, 1.43, 1.36, and 0.83, respectively). The high-energy group was more likely to require surgery (odds ratio [OR] = 2.80, 95% CI: 0.26-30.70), develop heterotopic bone (OR = 4.33, 95% CI: 0.33-57.65), develop arthritis (OR = 3.60, 95% CI: 0.45-28.56), and had longer time to surgery (mean = 4.8 days, standard deviation [SD] = 5.8 days) compared to low-energy group (mean = 2.5 days, SD = 2.3 days). DISCUSSION: The results of this case series confirm previous findings that patients with high-energy acetabular fractures are predominantly male, younger, and have fewer comorbidities than those who sustained low-energy fractures. Our results demonstrate that the majority of the high-energy fracture patients also suffered a concurrent hip dislocation with posterior wall fracture and experienced a longer time to surgery than the low-energy group. CONCLUSION: Geriatric patients who sustained high-energy acetabular fractures tend to have higher overall rates of complications, including infection, traumatic arthritis, and heterotopic bone formation when compared with patients with a low-energy fracture mechanism.

Topics & Concepts

Geriatric traumaMedicineHip fracturePopulation ageingLow energyOsteoporotic fractureFracture (geology)PopulationAcetabular fractureOsteoporosisAcetabulumGerontologyIntensive care medicineEmergency medicineInternal medicineSurgeryEnvironmental healthInjury Severity ScorePoison controlInjury preventionBone mineralGeotechnical engineeringPhysicsAtomic physicsEngineeringPelvic and Acetabular InjuriesHip and Femur FracturesHip disorders and treatments
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