AI Article Synopsis

  • Traumatic hip dislocations need quick diagnosis and treatment to keep the hip joint functional, but the typical signs may not always be present.
  • This case report presents an unusual instance of a posterior hip dislocation that stayed locked despite the ability to move the hip, occurring alongside a unstable pelvic injury, without the usual femoral head fracture.
  • The success of open reduction was achieved after recognizing that the femoral head was trapped, highlighting the importance of careful evaluation in similar injury cases.

Article Abstract

Case Report: Traumatic hip dislocations require prompt diagnosis and reduction to preserve the native joint. The classic irreducible posterior hip fracture-dislocation has been described as an immobile, slightly flexed, and internally rotated hip on physical exam. Classically, this irreducible pattern is associated with an ipsilateral femoral head fracture. The purpose of our report is to present an irreducible posterior hip dislocation with preserved motion in the setting of an unstable pelvic ring injury without associated femoral head pathology. Despite lacking clinical features of an irreducible hip, closed reduction in the emergency and operating rooms was unsuccessful, even after frame application for pelvis stability. Persistent irreducibility necessitated open reduction, where the femoral head was found to be buttonholed through the posterior hip capsule and blocking reduction.

Conclusion: A posteriorly dislocated hip with preserved motion in the setting of a concomitant unstable pelvic ring injury may belie the true locked nature of the femoroacetabular dislocation and high suspicion for femoral head incarceration is required. The description of this unique irreducible fracture pattern and the stepwise approach used for reduction may be useful for other surgeons who may encounter similar patterns of injury.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10185737PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tcr.2023.100836DOI Listing

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