Interactive Transcript
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Hello and welcome to Noon Conference, hosted
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and previous noon conferences by creating a free account.
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Today we are honored to welcome Dr.
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Samir Ranga for a lecture entitled CT Evaluation
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of Pelvic Ring Injuries, patterns,
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classifications, and Approach.
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Dr. Ranga is a radiologist at University Hospital in Muscat,
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Oman with subspecialty interest in emergency radiology
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neuroimaging and MSK imaging.
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In 2018, he received the prestigious Lee Rogers Fellowship
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in radiology journalism from the A RRS.
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Dr. Ranga is a reviewer on the RSNA Educational Exhibit
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Review panel and serves on the social media
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and Digital Innovation Committee for Radiographics Journal.
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He has authored over 40 peer reviewed articles,
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six book chapters, and 30 plus educational exhibits
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and scientific presentations for R-S-N-A-A-R-R-S
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and ESRA seasoned speaker.
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He has delivered more than a hundred lectures at national
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and international conferences,
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and we are honored to have him here with us today.
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At the end of the lecture, please join Dr.
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Ranga in a q and a session
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where he will address questions you
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may have on today's topic.
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Please remember to use the q
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and a feature to submit your questions so we can get to
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as many as we can before our time is up.
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With that, we are ready to begin today's lecture. Dr.
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Ranga, please take it from here.
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Yeah, so good evening from muscato man.
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Uh, it's 8:00 PM here.
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Uh, warm welcome to everyone, um, uh,
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who are joining from different time zone.
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Good morning, afternoon, good evening.
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Uh, thank you modality, uh, formally MRI online, um,
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for inviting me once again to speak at the NO conference.
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Uh, I started giving this no conference somewhere in 2020
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during the Covid time.
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Uh, this is my fifth
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or sixth, uh, uh, no conference, such warm
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and passionate people, and it's been my pleasure
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to be part of modality family.
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Uh, today we'll be discussing about one
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of my favorite topics, uh, is imaging
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of pelvic ring injuries, uh, with emphasis on the role of CT
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and how CT helps to identify, classify,
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and differentiate different pelvic injuries.
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Uh, this talk, um, is all about how I do it, my approach
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to this important topic, um, of trauma imaging, uh,
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no disclosures, um, just an acknowledgement to some of the,
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um, uh, best, uh, medical illustrators I know.
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And, uh, Dr. DeRio oal, Dr. Shaba Mara, and Dr.
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Matt Skalski. Very famous, uh, on social media.
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Uh, phenomenal guys
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and, uh, majority of all
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of the illustrations you will see today in my talk
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is prepared by one of them.
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So thank you so much
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and please follow them on all the social media, uh,
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and they're doing some amazing work.
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Um, I have been working at two of the,
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the largest trauma centers in Oman since 2010,
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so it's almost 15 years,
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and I've seen probably more than like few thousand pan
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cities for Polytrauma
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and probably a few hundred, uh, uh, pelvic ring injuries.
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And, uh, what I'm going to discuss today is uh, uh,
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my reflection of what I learned in last 15 years, uh,
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working at two of this, uh, incredible trauma centers.
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So pelvic fractures, uh, can be divided into several types,
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and one is, uh, one which involves the pelvic ring.
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And this ring injuries can be divided again into high energy
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trauma, which occurs in young people due
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to motor vehicle collision or fall from height,
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or it can occur in older population due
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to low energy trauma like fall from the ground level, uh,
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uh, which, which is a common injury in
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that particular age group.
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The pelvic fracture can involve ace,
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which we are not going to look at today.
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It can be a non ringing fracture,
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which can involve the sacrum, iliac,
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or pubic bone, not as a part of the ring,
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or it can be a ian side of the muscle.
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And the, uh, ligament test attachment is again, not
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what we are going to do today.
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So my today's talk is about pelvic leak injuries in high
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energy trauma either due to motor vehicle collision
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or fall from height, young population
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with normal bone density.
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And we are going to talk today from a bony
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articular trauma perspective.
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So orthopedic trauma perspective today, I'm not going
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to talk about vascular lower urinary tract
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or soft tissue injury, which are frequently associated
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with these fractures or this injuries.
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So as far as numbers are concerned, like majority
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of the level valve trauma center, uh, pelvic fractures
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or pelvic ring injuries, you will see somewhere,
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anywhere from three to five to 10% of the patients.
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Overall mortality, again, varies depending upon which type
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of center you work, but it varies again from lower single
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digit to all the way up to 45%.
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And it all depends upon how unstable the pelvic fracture is.
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So as the fracture becomes more unstable, the possibility
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of hemorrhage and associated to mortality increases
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and open fractures has some of the worst injury,
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one worst mortality all almost up to 45%.
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Most of the death which occurs in pelvic uh,
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trauma patients is due
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to pelvic vascular injuries and hemorrhage.
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And remember that when someone has unstable pelvic fracture,
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it's likely that they have other injuries at that dorm,
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head, chest, and anywhere else,
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which can also result in the, uh, in the death.
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So my learning objective
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for today is we will review the anatomy
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and biomechanics of pelvic ring.
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We will learn about what is the imaging appropriateness of
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of uh, uh, uh, in pelvic trauma.
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We will learn about the classification
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and two most commonly used classification young Burgess
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and the tile, A OO OT classification.
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Then we'll look at the TT systematic search pattern
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and checklist based approach.
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We'll look for the binders
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and pitfalls, uh, how they can, they can mask the injury
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and how to unask those injuries.
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Last but not least, we'll discuss about stability
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and stability spectrum and
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what are the management implication?
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Uh, case-based review, I don't think so.
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We'll have a time, but if a time, we'll we'll go
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through some of the cases as well.
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So let's start with the anatomy and the biomechanics.
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So as we know that the pelvic ring is formed
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by the five bones,
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two paired bones in the front two pubic bone
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and the side two uh, iliac bones.
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And on the back one sacrum,
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this five bones are joint at three joints anteriorly,
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two pubic point joint at the pubic symphysis
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and posteriorly two saac, two iliac point joint
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with the sacrum at two sacroiliac joints.
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Arbitrary pelvic ring can be divided by hel spine
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or stab into two component anterior ring, which consists
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of pubic bone, pubic symphysis and pubic air mic
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and posterior ring, which consists of iliac bone,
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sacroiliac joint, and the sacrum.
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The bones and the joints are inherently unstable
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and which is reinforced by the ligaments,
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which makes it relatively stable.
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So the anterior ring overall provides relatively less
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stability to the entire ring, only 15%.
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The posterior ring provides almost 85% of the stability.
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The pubic symphysis is reinforced by the SE cell ligament,
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which is a part of the capsular reinforcement.
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The posterior ring, which provides majority of the uh,
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stability of the ring, uh, is primarily by the SI ligaments.
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Si ligament can be divided into two types,
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anterior sacroiliac ligament,
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which are relatively weak ligament
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and part of the capillary reinforcement.
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The posterior ligament, which are the strongest ligament in
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the human body, which makes almost up to 60 to 70%
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of the total pelvic ring stability.
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This posterior ligament can be further divided into entro
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posterior si, long and short ligaments.
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All of these ligaments cannot be discreetly
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seen separately on imaging.
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However, the injury can be indirectly implied
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by looking at some of the other sides.
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We have pelvic floor ligaments, which includes sacro tubes
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and sacro spinous ligament.
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And last but not least is the iliolumbar ligament.
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Let's try to look at this ligaments.
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So this is a 3D anatomy.
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We are looking at the pelvis from the front
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and we can see that the two pubic bone at the pubic
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symphysis and this phis is reinforced
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by the phi and ligament.
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The anterior part of the sacroiliac joint,
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which is a reinforcement of the anterior capsule,
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is the anterior scro ligament,
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which is relatively a weak ligament.
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The sacrospinous ligament extend from the lower
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and the lateral anterior aspect of the sacrum
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and goes to the hel spine, which is horizontally oriented
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and which provides some stability, which is a part
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of the pelvic floor ligament.
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And last but not the least,
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are the iliolumbar ligaments which extend from the
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transverse processor of L four L five
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and extend all the way to the IAC crust.
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When you look at the transverse section of the pelvis,
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the SI ligaments are arranged from front
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to back in four layers.
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The most anterior one is the anterior si ligament as I
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as we saw in the coronal anterior 3D image.
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And then the posterior si ligament has three component.
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The first component is the inpro component,
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which is the anterior most among three.
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The second component is short posterior IL ligament.
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And the third component is a long posterior IL ligament
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Outta three intros is the strongest ligament.
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Again, these three ligaments cannot be seen separately.
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However, the injury can be implied based on the widening
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of the pubic widening of the sacroiliac chart.
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Again, we are looking at the posterior view of the pelvis
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and how these ligaments are arranged.
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So you can see that from posteriorly.
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You can see part of the the short si ligament which extend
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from the sacrum to the iliac in a transverse manner.
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We have this longitudinally extended posterior SI ligament,
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the long part of it, and this ligament inferiorly is
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continuous with the second part
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of the pelvic floor ligament.
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The first we saw is a sacro spinous ligament.
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The second one is sacro tubus ligament.
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Sacro tubus ligament arises from the posterior lateral
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inferior aspect of the sacrum
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and extend to the, uh, extend to the sacral,
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the hel tuberosity.
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And this ligament is continuous with the long part
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of the posterior asci ligament.
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So they make the single sheetlike ligament structure
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how these ligaments help in the biomechanical stability.
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So almost all of this ligament contributes variably
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to the rotational or the external stability,
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rotation, stability of the pelvis.
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However, the vertical stability of the pelvis is primarily
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by the posterior SI complex with little bit of uh, uh,
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contribution from the pelvic floor
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and the IAL lumbar ligaments.
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The spine and pelvic work together as a single unit
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and the lumbar spine L five joints at the sacrum at L five
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S one, so the Lphi S one
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and S two, the Lphi S one facet joint, sacroiliac joint
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and all the ligaments, what we described makes
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the spine or pelvic unit.
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Some of the pelvic ring injuries can disrupt the spinal
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or pelvic unit as well,
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and that needs a different way of management compared
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to the pelvic isolated pelvic ring injuries.
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So when the ring is stable, when all the bones,
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all the joints and all the ligaments
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and muscles are intact, the pelvis helps in transmission
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of the load from the weight from the upper body
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to the lower limb.
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It helps in the gait
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and the smooth movement, painless movement
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of the of the body.
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It supports the vital structures which include blood
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vessels, geral, urinary tract, gastrointestinal tract,
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including the rectum as well as the nose and the now plexus.
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The second part of my learning objective is
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how we image the patients.
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It's suspected polytrauma.
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So we have two imaging modality,
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one is x-rays and second is ct.
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So radiograph, we do it in all patients.
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It's part of a TLS protocol.
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We do portable x-ray in the trauma bay.
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Single pelvic x-ray is done P view in all these patients,
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we do CT a, pretty much any patient who is stable enough
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to be transferred to a ct.
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Our x-rays help. So the x-rays help you
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to detect the unstable fractures.
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It's very good in detecting anterior ring injuries.
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It helps to triage us
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to further management whether the patient will go for CT
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or IR or, or it also helps in CT protocol optimization.
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Some places they use x-rays to do that
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and it also helps which patient will need pelvic blinder if
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it's already not in place for the pre-hospital care.
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The disadvantage of pelvic x-rays is that we Ms. Good number
12:24
of posterior ring injury.
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That means the iliac fracture, sacral fractures
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and sacroiliac joint injuries.
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In one study, they saw that almost up to more than half
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of the sacral fractures were missed in, in, um, in a,
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in a pelvic x-ray,
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particularly in older patients who are osteopenic.
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But as I said, the the pelvic uh,
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x-rays are extremely good when it comes
12:47
to the anterior ring injuries
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and all fractures
12:50
of pubic re all pubic diastasis can be very well seen on
12:53
the, on the x-rays, the when it's grossly unstable,
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even posterior ring injuries can also be seen on x-ray.
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So what are the signs
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of features which suggest unstable fracture
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patterns on radiograph?
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So whenever you see displaced fracture, bilateral pubic
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fracture or displaced fracture of sacrum
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or iliac, it's a sign that this pelvic ring is unstable.
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Whenever you see gross muscle mar alignment
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of the pubic diastasis CCI joint
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or vertical displacement of the hemi pelvis,
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those are the signs that this pelvis is
13:24
potentially unstable.
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Let's see some of the example. What do you see?
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This is a deformed pelvis.
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It doesn't look bilateral symmetrical.
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You can see the displaced fracture
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of the superior pubic Ramon left side,
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inferior pubic Ramon left side.
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There is a fracture of the inferior pubic reus anterior uh,
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or posterior part of the CE tablum.
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There is a fracture of the pubic CH ramus.
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On the right side there is a fracture
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of the pubic CH Ramon the left side.
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So we can see there is a bilateral multiple pubic
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fracture which are displaced and pelvis is deform.
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So this is a sign of an unstable pelvic fracture.
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How does this help in the drive eye of the patient?
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So when you see an unstable injury like this,
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if patient is hemodynamically stable,
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they will go for the ct.
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If the patient is hemodynamically unstable, they do fast.
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If the fastest positive patient goes to the
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or if the fastest is negative, patient goes to the IR.
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For the transarterial embolization
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and the angiographic, again, there are places,
14:21
as I told you, they help the, the x-rays are used to
14:25
optimize the CT protocol.
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So when the pelvic ring looks in intake,
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they do single phase portal venous imaging
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of the pel of the pelvis.
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However, when the pelvis looks unstable
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or any fracture of the pelvis is seen,
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they do multiphasic CT of the pelvis, the fractures
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as seen on the on the x-rays as a part of the portable.
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Her radiograph can also help us
14:48
to decide which patient will need a binder.
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Any unstable pelvic injury you see on the pelvic radiograph,
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the binder is placed in the trauma bay if it's already not
14:59
placed by the paramedics at the hos at the
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pre-hospital care.
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So which patient we should do ct?
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Any patient who is stable enough who can be transferred
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to the ct, CT should be done as a part
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of the polytrauma protocol.
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So all patients who are in hemodynamically stable will
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undergo a ct.
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All patients who initially presents with unstability
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or hemodynamically unstable
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but they respond to the volume responders
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and which in the current era is almost three fourth
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of the initial unstable patient will become stable
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because of the excellent uh, uh, protocols
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of the volume expansion.
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They will undergo a ct.
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CT is a gold standard to detect the fractures
15:42
to detect the instability CT ISS gold standard
15:44
to detect the vascular injuries as well
15:46
as soft tissue injuries like lower uterine
15:48
tract visal tract.
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When it comes to polytrauma CT pelvis can be imaged in a
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single phase multiphase or with a split bolus.
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Uh, today I'm not going
16:00
to discuss about which is the best protocol.
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I'll just tell you what we do.
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At our institution, we do multiphasic CT in all patients.
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So our protocol include non pon CT of the head and C spine.
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We do arterial phase chest abdo pelvis,
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and then we do venous phase abdominal pelvis.
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So all pelvis in our patients undergo
16:21
by PHA examination arterial endo venous.
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We do delayed phases based on the on-call radiologist, uh,
16:28
uh, interpretation of the artery and venous phase.
16:30
And CT cysto graphic can be done in certain um, a number
16:33
of these patients as well.
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So once we have done the ct, why we have to learn about how
16:40
to classify these fractures
16:42
and which classification system to use.
16:44
So why to classify the pelvic fractures
16:47
to understand the mechanism of injury,
16:49
to detect which fractures are potentially
16:53
unstable based on the mechanism of morphologic
16:55
to guide the management,
16:56
whether this patient will undergo
16:58
conservative or surgical management.
17:00
It'll also anticipate the bleeding risk
17:02
and transfusion needs.
17:04
So more unstable the fracture,
17:05
more likely the patient will need the more transmission.
17:08
It'll predict the morbidity and mortality.
17:11
It'll help to triage the effectively
17:13
where the patient will go to ICU ward
17:16
or it'll go to the OT or ir.
17:18
It'll help in the resource planning
17:19
and it'll also standardize the communication
17:22
across the clinical team.
17:23
So when I say youngberg is a PC two, my, my trauma surgeons
17:28
or my trauma team also understand what I mean by APC two.
17:32
It also enables research, audit and outcome comparison.
17:35
So that's why we have to classify
17:37
whatever classification we use.
17:39
So most of the classifications
17:40
or all of the classifications are based on the imaging
17:44
and all of this classification came much
17:47
before the CT became a standard of care.
17:49
So these classifications are based on primarily the
17:52
radiographic interpretation.
17:54
However, we'll extrapolate this on the ct,
17:59
the common classifications which are used are young Burgess
18:02
and the tile O-A-O-T-A.
18:05
So the first people who came up
18:07
with this classification was the penal.
18:09
So most of this classification is based on the
18:12
work done by penal.
18:13
So young burque is also based on the penal work
18:15
and TY is also based on the penal.
18:17
However, they're slightly different.
18:19
So young burque is based on the mechanism.
18:21
Penal is also based on the mechanism.
18:23
T decided to go based on the stability in in in UH, and
18:28
and tile and penal published this
18:30
classification in eighties.
18:33
Later on the OA
18:34
and OTA came up
18:35
with this morphology based classification in 96,
18:38
which were later revised in 2007
18:40
and 2080 18, which is morphology stability
18:43
and mechanistic based.
18:45
So Youngberg is classification is mechanistic based
18:48
and where we decide about what is the primary vector
18:52
of the direction of the force or the injury.
18:54
And based on that there are four types of vector
18:58
enter posterior compression, lateral compression,
19:00
vertical share or combined.
19:02
And this, each of this vector can have three subclass based
19:06
on how, how severe the force is.
19:09
And so a PC will have a PC 1, 2, 3, lc will have lc 1, 2, 3
19:14
vertical share and combined do not have any subclass based
19:17
on the force because by and large vertical share
19:19
and combine are considered
19:21
as the most severe force involved in those patients.
19:26
Tile decided that rather than based on the
19:29
mechanism they will,
19:31
they will classify the fracture based on the stability.
19:34
So they divided the fracture into three classes, A, B,
19:37
and C, A when the pelvic ring is in intact
19:40
or the posterior ring is intact.
19:43
B, when the posterior ring is partially intact
19:46
and C is when both anterior
19:48
and posterior rings are completely disrupted.
19:51
So there is a total instability.
19:53
So A is a stable fracture, B is partially unstable
19:56
or partially stable fracture and C is unstable fracture.
20:01
So the traumatic forces as described
20:04
by panel were described in 1960s.
20:06
They're based on the biomechanical studies,
20:08
they were done on the ca and x-rays were taken
20:11
and they, they divide the fracture types into three
20:15
biomechanical types, A PC lc and vertical share later on.
20:20
Young pges also put a four type of uh,
20:23
force which is a combined which is a combination
20:25
of any three types of uh, forces used
20:28
by the panel which were the pure forces.
20:30
So the first force is the enter posterior compression force
20:34
where the force direction comes from the front to back.
20:38
It'll externally rotate the pelvis,
20:40
it'll distract the pelvis.
20:42
In the horizontal plan it'll open up the pelvis like a book.
20:46
So it's called open book fracture
20:48
and it'll result in the diastasis more than the fracture
20:52
and it'll result in the volume expansion of the pelvis.
20:57
It is most commonly occur when there is a head-on collision
21:00
type of a uh, uh, injury mechanism.
21:03
And what happens? So falls direction comes from front
21:06
to back which will result in external rotation
21:10
of the anterior ring.
21:11
External rotation of the posterior ring.
21:13
As the anterior ring is weaker compared
21:16
to the posterior ring, the first distraction happens
21:19
anteriorly and then progressively posterior
21:21
distraction also aus.
21:22
It'll open the pelvis like an open book from front to back
21:26
and it'll result primarily into pubic diastasis.
21:30
So pubic diastasis is the hallmark of this injury
21:33
and it'll ultimately result in the expansion of the volume.
21:36
So as I said it, the hallmark
21:38
of the A PC injury is pubic diastasis
21:42
with increasing force sacroiliac joint also dias uh,
21:46
become distracted from front to back.
21:50
So APC one which is only like the relatively mild force in
21:55
interop posterior direction pubic diastasis occur.
21:58
However, it is relatively mild
22:00
but side joint remains normal.
22:02
So this injury only involves the anterior ring
22:06
and it preserves the integrity of the posterior ring.
22:09
And so this injury is potentially considered rotationally
22:12
and vertically stable in a PC two other than pubic
22:17
symphysis, there is a partial disruption
22:19
of the posterior posteriorly.
22:20
There is variable disruption of the anterior SI joint
22:24
as well as the pure pelvic floor ligament which includes
22:27
sacro tubus and sacro spinous ligament.
22:31
The pubic symphysis diastasis is slightly more than a PC
22:34
one, which is like 25 to 40 mm
22:37
and anterior SI joint opens up and there is some distraction
22:41
or the avulsion injury of the pubic uh,
22:44
pelvic floor lit bits.
22:46
A PC three is the most severe form of the A PC injury
22:50
where the pubic diastasis is more severe
22:52
more than four centimeter.
22:54
The SI joint separates not only in the front
22:57
but also in the BL back.
22:59
So it's called global SI joint whitening
23:01
and all the ligaments of the pelvic uh, the pelvic floor
23:05
as well as the ileal lumbar ligaments are also disrupted.
23:09
So AP C one involves only the pubic ligament as diastasis
23:13
or injury AP C two apart from anterior there is some
23:18
involvement of the anterior SI
23:19
and the pelvic floor ligament In APC three there is
23:23
posterior SI ligament is also completely disrupted
23:28
in lateral compression.
23:29
The force direction is from side
23:31
to side which will internally record the pelvis
23:34
and so the pelvis just
23:36
has a crush injury impact on itself collide in within
23:40
pelvic will crumple.
23:42
It's like crumpling. The book
23:44
fractures are more common than diastasis
23:46
and pelvic volume reduces unlike an A PC
23:49
where pelvic volume increases.
23:51
So this is typically occur in T-bone collision
23:54
and particularly the guy
23:56
who is whose car is hit from the sun, the guy
23:59
who is hitting the scar might get the A PC injury
24:02
because for him it is different to back
24:04
but guy who is hit from the side
24:06
for him it is a side lc type of injury might occur.
24:10
So what happens the force direction comes from side
24:14
to side from one side or from both sides.
24:16
There is internal rotation of the pelvis.
24:19
The anterior ring is weaker so there is
24:21
where you see it first
24:22
and then the posterior will also internal rotate.
24:25
So you will see the sacral impaction fracture.
24:27
In the iliac fracture. The pelvis composes like a book.
24:31
There is a fracture is more commonly seen.
24:33
The diastasis and volume of the pelvis reduces.
24:37
So the hallmark of lateral compression injury includes
24:41
pubic fracture.
24:42
All lateral compression injuries have some form
24:45
of pubic fractures.
24:47
There is sacral impaction injury.
24:49
Almost all lateral compression injuries have iliac fracture
24:52
or the crescent fractures is a part of lc two fractures.
24:57
And then there is lc three also, which we'll learn later.
25:00
But fractures are more common compared to distraction.
25:03
So whenever I see any pubic REI fracture, any ral fracture,
25:07
any iliac fracture, I know that it is some form
25:10
of lateral compression injury.
25:13
So lateral compression type one
25:15
where you have the pubic REI fracture as well as sorry
25:19
as well as the impaction fracture of the sacrum.
25:24
In lc two you have lc one
25:27
plus you have a iliac fracture which extend
25:30
to the sacro iliac joints
25:32
and lc two where you have one hemi pelvis has a a type
25:36
of LC injury.
25:38
The other hemi pelvis has a PC type of injury.
25:41
So basically lc three is a type
25:43
of a combined injury in in youngberg is similar
25:47
to a combined injury
25:48
however it is classically described as a wind SW wind,
25:51
sweat, pelvis or lc three type of injury.
25:55
The vertical share is the most severe form
25:58
of injury like it is the force is perpendicular
26:01
to the long exs of the pelvis.
26:03
It's a distraction injury
26:05
as if you are just steering the entire textbook of the book.
26:08
And it can result in variable fractures
26:11
and diastasis volume expanding basically one hemi pelvis
26:16
moves in cranial cordal direction compared
26:19
to the other pelvis.
26:20
So the force direction is vertical cranial sheer injury
26:24
and it'll result in in the hemi pelvis
26:28
a move into cranial direction in relation
26:31
to the other hemi pelvis.
26:33
So the hallmark of the injury is one hemi pelvis most
26:38
in relation to the other hemi pelvis.
26:41
Now what are the disadvantage of this classification system?
26:45
Several disadvantage
26:46
but one of the most important disadvantage is
26:48
that this classification is based on the static imaging
26:52
which doesn't incorporate the elastic recoil
26:56
of the soft tissues body health.
26:58
And so most of our many
26:59
of this classification quite often underestimate the true
27:03
injury or the instability
27:05
because it is based on the static imaging.
27:09
Now we'll learn about how I approach the CT
27:13
and what is my search pattern
27:14
and the checklist, the search pattern
27:16
and checklist can be based on x-rays on the ct.
27:20
This is the extra search pattern which I'm not going
27:23
to go in detail.
27:24
And Rio Paul has done this amazing work.
27:27
Uh uh uh, I was one of the co-authors with radio pedia.
27:31
This poster is available free on radio pedia
27:34
2023 so please check it.
27:36
And he has produced some amazing uh,
27:38
checklist on the radiographs
27:40
today my talk is about CT search pattern in the checklist.
27:43
So we look at the similar pattern anterior ring,
27:46
we look at the pubic symphysis, we look at the pubic
27:50
and the acetabulum posterior ring,
27:53
we look at the sacroiliac joint sacral fractures
27:55
and iliac bone fractures observed in
27:58
that we look at the lumbar spine femur and everything else.
28:02
So anterior arch injury can involve pubic phis of pubic
28:07
posterior arch injury can involve SI joint
28:10
iliac bone or sacrum.
28:13
So let's see why the search pattern is important.
28:17
So search pattern is important
28:18
because as the biomechanics ring always breaks it to places.
28:23
So whenever you see anterior ring injury there has
28:26
to be a posterior ring injury and
28:29
whenever there is a posterior injury there has
28:31
to be anterior ring injury.
28:33
All of this injury occurs in a predictable pattern.
28:36
So a PC have a predictable pattern of AP anterior
28:40
as well as posterior injury.
28:42
Same way lateral compression vertical share also have a
28:44
predictable pattern of anterior and posterior injury.
28:47
So if you can identify correctly correct pattern
28:51
of anterior ring, you can extrapolate
28:54
or you can imagine what will be the posturing injury will be
28:58
stay away for lateral compression and vertical she.
29:00
And so it'll help you to reflectively
29:05
identify the entire spectrum
29:06
of injury if you identify one injury correctly
29:09
and let's try to do hardly see how I do it.
29:14
The normal pubic symphysis, what we look for, we look
29:17
for distance alignment, soft tissues and aversion.
29:20
What is the distance or distance is the maximum D distance
29:24
between the two pubic bone on axial and on coronal.
29:28
In adults it's less than six millimeter up to three
29:31
to six millimeters normal.
29:32
In women of childbearing age particularly
29:35
who have recently delivered or who postpartum
29:38
or who have had children will be slightly wider of eight
29:42
to 10 millimeter pediatric patient.
29:44
Up to 10 millimeter less than 10
29:46
years should be considered normal.
29:47
So that is one thing we look for is the distance.
29:50
Second thing we look for alignment.
29:52
So alignment we look for two places.
29:54
One is the on axial, we look
29:56
for the posterior smooth alignment
29:57
and on coronal we look for the cranial cordal alignment.
30:01
Subtle mal alignment
30:02
of one millimeter should be considered as a normal.
30:05
There is no like a perfect geometric alignment.
30:08
Okay, soft tissue we look for.
30:10
So soft tissue you have to look for peri anterior pub,
30:14
pre pubic and supra pubic supra Pubic is best seen on
30:17
sagittal if you do it, but
30:19
otherwise the exile images are fantastic to look
30:21
for pre pubic
30:22
and supra pubic soft tissue,
30:24
there should not be any soft tissue swelling other than the
30:28
anterior abdominal wall rectus muscle anti pubic plate.
30:32
UL injuries will look for the uls
30:34
of the pubic symphysis ligament which attaches to the edge
30:37
of the pubic bone on axi and the coronal images.
30:41
So same way on the sacroiliac joint we look for four things,
30:45
distance alignment, symmetry, soft tissue, and avulsions.
30:48
Again the only difference in the sacroiliac joint
30:50
because we have two sacroiliac joint, we can also look
30:53
for the symmetry and sacroiliac joint should be
30:55
bilateral symmetrical.
30:57
So what is the normal distance?
30:58
A normal distance is two to four millimeter.
31:01
Usually there is right to left symmetry.
31:04
Usually it should have a normal ap, A enter posterior
31:08
and cranial cordal alignment.
31:09
And posterior sacroiliac joint is slightly wider than the
31:13
anterior sacroiliac joint which is normal.
31:16
Anterior should not be wider than the posterior.
31:19
Posterior is slightly wider than
31:21
anterior, which can be normal.
31:22
Okay, and pediatric it is slightly wider up
31:25
to eight millimeters should be considered normal less
31:27
than 10 years of age.
31:29
Now let's see how the A PC injuries look on CT and x-rays.
31:33
So hallmark of a PC injury is pubic diastasis.
31:37
And then with increasing force you will see variable injury
31:41
of anterior SI joint
31:43
and then poster si joint pelvic volume increases
31:46
and diastasis are more common that fracture.
31:47
So as you can see in this patient,
31:50
pubic symphysis diastasis which is more than three
31:53
to six millimeter but less than 2.5 millimeters.
31:56
So as per our conventional panel classification
31:59
or YB classification, this should be type one.
32:03
And as you carefully look posteriorly both the sacroiliac
32:06
joints are looking symmetrical and normal.
32:10
What is happening in this patient again you can see
32:12
that there is a widening
32:14
of the pubic symphysis slightly more than probably 2.5.
32:17
However you can see posterior lead compared to the left.
32:21
The right sacroiliac joint is more wider, which suggests
32:23
that this patient has at least a PC two injury.
32:27
We cannot differentiate a PC two from three on radiograph
32:34
A PC three injury you can see
32:35
that the pubic diastasis is more than four centimeter
32:38
and you can see grass diastasis
32:40
of sacroiliac joint on right side compared to
32:42
that on the left side.
32:44
So this makes it APC three.
32:46
So APC one on radiograph on the ct you can see
32:49
that both the sacroiliac joint looks
32:52
symmetrical and well aligned.
32:54
There is mild widely as you go from front to back,
32:57
which is a normal finding,
32:59
but anterior sacro joints are less than two
33:01
to four millimeter and well aligned.
33:03
So this suggests that this patient has a PC one injury.
33:07
Now a PC one injury as I said the pubic
33:10
and five cell dias station is graded based on
33:13
2.5 centimeter or less.
33:15
2.5 to four or more than five to four differentiate APC one,
33:19
two, and three and which suggests
33:21
that there is potential ligamentous involvement
33:24
and which makes the pelvis stable or unstable.
33:27
So look at this thing. This patient has a gross instability
33:31
more than four centimeter.
33:32
The posterior size markedly widen.
33:35
So this is a PC three
33:37
and this patient probably the elastic recall did not work
33:40
that much but look at this patient, this patient
33:44
a the pubic symphysis is less than four centimeter,
33:47
however you can see
33:49
that the the SI joint is completely disrupted.
33:53
So that suggests that this patient,
33:55
the elastic recoil has brought back the pubic symphysis
33:59
partly to its normal uh uh, less than four centimeter,
34:02
but still the SI joint is completely vital.
34:05
So this suggests that the 2.54
34:08
and more than four works when the
34:12
IT does not work all the time
34:14
because elastic recoil can make the pubic PHIS look less
34:18
severe than what it is.
34:19
So you have to look at the SI joint in order to diagnose
34:24
or differentiate a PC one, two, and three
34:26
and we'll see how to do that.
34:27
So this is how the normal SI joint looks like.
34:30
And look at this APC one.
34:32
I told you this how the normal AP PC the side joint
34:34
looks like on APC one.
34:36
Look at this APC two ap,
34:37
this is the normal SI joint on
34:39
the left side in this patient.
34:40
However, on the right side there is a anterior divergent
34:44
or VHA SI joint which is a sign
34:48
of APC two injury compared to the fracture or the patient.
34:52
On these uh, the second image on the left side
34:55
where there is a diffuse parallel widening of the SI joint,
35:00
which suggests that this patient has a globally
35:03
unstable A PC type three injury.
35:05
So this is how we differentiate two from three on CT two
35:09
will have a anterior divergent V-shape injury while three
35:13
will have a diffuse parallel widening of the SI joint
35:18
lateral compression injury.
35:20
The hallmark of lateral compression injury is the pubic REI
35:24
fracture which happens in all patients with
35:26
with lc injuries, particular impact fracture.
35:29
Almost all patients iliac fracture happens.
35:32
Which particular type of iliac fracture,
35:34
which is the crescent fracture
35:36
and fractures are more common than distraction
35:39
or diastasis, unlike in a PC
35:41
where diastasis was more common compared to the fracture.
35:45
So let's see, what are the, what is the hallmark
35:46
of lateral compression?
35:48
So whenever you see pubic RAM fracture,
35:50
this patient has one pubic ramus,
35:53
two pubic ram per pubic ram.
35:55
So at least three pubic MI are fractured.
35:59
This patient must have a posterior ring injury until proven
36:03
otherwise because pelvic ring always breaks at two points.
36:06
So when you do a CT you will always see a posterior ring
36:10
injury which may or may not be determined on this x-ray
36:14
which is the limitation of the radiograph.
36:17
B. What are the, what is the hallmark
36:19
of the posterior injury in the sacral?
36:22
Uh, in the lc is the sacral impaction failure.
36:26
This subtle buckling, subtle impaction injury
36:29
of the sacral ella is the hallmark
36:32
of the lc one injury.
36:34
So lc one has two basic injury in anterior ring you will see
36:39
multiple pubic ramal fracture posteriorly.
36:42
You will see this impaction buckling type
36:45
of a sacred fracture.
36:48
Again this patient you can see superior pubic ramus
36:51
fracture, inferior pubic CMUs fracture
36:52
and left side also there is probably an inferior pubic CMUs
36:55
fracture At the same time there is a impaction fracture
36:59
of the sacral ella on the right side.
37:01
So this patient has lc one injury
37:03
with characteristic hallmark injury of the anterior ring
37:07
and the posterior room again the sacral injury
37:12
in lc one has a spectrum
37:14
with the mildest fracture is this impaction fracture which
37:17
only involves the anterior cortex
37:20
and only involve the sacral ella compared
37:23
to this fracture which is involving the entire sacrum from
37:26
the front to back
37:28
and it's involving more medial part of the fracture
37:30
and more lower part of the sacrum.
37:33
So the lc one is not a single injury
37:37
but a spectrum of injury.
37:39
This is a mild type of lc injury lc one injury.
37:42
This is a more severe type of lc one injury.
37:45
So that is one of another important teaching point is that
37:50
lc one is not a single injury but it's a injury spectrum
37:54
and in the same injury spectrum you can have a stable
37:57
injury, partially unstable injury
37:59
and completely unstable injury.
38:03
The one of the rare type of lc injury other than
38:08
pubic bone fracture is this injury which is called
38:11
locked pubic phis.
38:12
Where pubic phis overrides each other.
38:16
It can be seen along with pubic fracture
38:18
or an absence of pubic fracture.
38:20
So locking of the pubic phis is also one of the
38:25
injuries spectrum, rare
38:27
or uncommon injury spectrum
38:28
of the lateral compression injury.
38:30
When you look at the posteriorly you will see some other
38:32
type of L injury in this patient the iliac injury is seen.
38:38
So this was about LC one.
38:41
LC two is when you see the scent fracture
38:44
of the iliac bone, which is a hallmark of the lc two, how
38:49
to look for the crescent fracture.
38:50
So crescent fracture has this five criteria on axial what
38:54
to look for is iliac bone fracture there?
38:57
Yes, iliac bone fracture is there,
38:59
is iliac bone fracture transverse or obliquely oriented?
39:02
Yes, it is transverse or obliquely oriented.
39:05
Does this fracture interiorly extend to the SI joint?
39:09
Yes, it extend to the SI joint.
39:11
Does it cause some widening
39:13
of the SI joint interior to this part?
39:16
Yes it does. Cause does the posterior SI joint intake?
39:20
Yes it is. So when all
39:22
of this five criteria are met in variable combination,
39:26
you call this as a lateral compression type two IAC crest
39:31
injury on axial, what are the criteria on coronal?
39:34
Again, same question. Is iliac fracture there? Yes it is.
39:38
There is the fracture vertical obliquely oriented?
39:41
Yes, it is vertical obliquely oriented.
39:43
Does fracture extend to the SI joint? Yes it does extend.
39:46
Is the SI joint widened below the level of the fracture?
39:50
Yes it is. Is the side joint intact
39:52
above the lower level fracture?
39:54
Yes, it is intact.
39:55
So when all of this criteria are met in variable
39:57
combination, you call this a cent fracture,
40:01
lc two fracture again on x-ray.
40:04
Do you see IAC fracture?
40:05
Yes you we do see is it vertical or oblique oriented?
40:08
Yes it does. Does it extend to the SI joint? Yes.
40:11
It looks like the rest of the findings you may not be able
40:15
to see on x-ray
40:16
and that is why you have to do CT again.
40:20
Why we are, we are, we are saying that this is important
40:23
because lc two can potentially be an unstable fracture lc
40:28
two, just like lc one has a spectrum
40:30
of injury from relatively stable to unstable injury.
40:34
However, iliac bone fracture can be of multiple times
40:39
and lc two
40:40
or the crescent is only one of that type of a fracture.
40:44
So what are those? Lookalike fracture of the iliac bone
40:47
or iliac bone fracture suggests some form
40:50
of lateral compression injury.
40:52
So this fractures can be avulsion type which are not
40:56
typically lateral compression injury
40:57
but that can involve the avulsion of the A SIS or A IIS.
41:02
It can involve the avulsion of the IAC crest.
41:06
This fracture can involve the transversely, the IAC crest.
41:10
So this is called transverse IAC crest fracture.
41:13
Because the fracture line is more transversely oriented,
41:16
it can be single or multi fragmentary.
41:18
This is one of the non ring fracture, stable fracture.
41:23
This is another patient where the iliac fracture is there.
41:26
It is more vertically oriented
41:29
but it is not extending to the SI joint.
41:32
So this is not a cent fracture.
41:34
However this fracture is extending to the pelvic brim.
41:39
So this makes it a ring fracture,
41:42
potentially unstable fracture.
41:45
Again is it a vertical or a horizontal fracture?
41:48
It is vertical fracture. Does it extend to the pubic phi?
41:53
Does it extend to the sacroiliac joint? No it does not.
41:56
Does it extend to the pubic rim? No it does not.
41:59
So this makes it a vertical fracture part
42:02
of lateral compression injury
42:03
but not cent, not pelvic brim injury.
42:07
This is a fracture.
42:09
There is a multiple types of fracture,
42:12
multiple iliac fractures.
42:13
This is a transversely oriented fracture.
42:16
This is a vertically oriented fracture extended
42:18
to the pelvic brim.
42:20
This is uh, another obliquely oriented fracture
42:23
to the SI joint.
42:24
So this is a crescent fracture,
42:26
this is a pelvic brim fracture.
42:28
This is a transverse fracture of the iliac bone.
42:31
Other than that, this patient also has a characteristic lc
42:35
one injury which is the compression
42:37
or impaction injury of the sacral ella.
42:40
So this fractures,
42:42
multiple fractures can be present in the same patient
42:45
and the same fracture can have a variable severity
42:49
or the spectrum of the instability.
42:53
Lc three is a wind swept pelvis and any combination of lc
42:58
and a PC injury is called lc three injury.
43:01
So look at this fracture.
43:02
There is a, there is a a lc two type of I
43:07
to vein fracture or the crescent fracture on the
43:09
left hemi pelvis.
43:10
At the same time there is a anterior V-shape widening
43:14
of the sacroiliac joint on the right side which suggests
43:17
there is a APC two injury.
43:19
So lc two on left, APC two on right, this makes it lc three.
43:25
This is another patient lc one injury on the left side.
43:28
So you can see the iac, the the sacral
43:31
compression fracture which is going from front to back,
43:34
more severe type of lc one spectrum at the same time.
43:37
On the right hemi pelvis there is anterior divergent
43:40
widening which is APC two.
43:42
So LC one plus APC two is lc three.
43:46
Any combination of one pelvis lc,
43:48
other hemi pelvis A PC is lc three Injury
43:53
vertical share as I said is one
43:54
of the most surgery injury hallmark is cranial cordal
43:57
displacement of the one hemi pelvis
43:59
and this cranial cordal displacement occurs
44:01
through the pubic rami or pubic symphysis.
44:03
It can occur posteriorly through the sacrum iliac joint.
44:07
So the, the hallmark is the cranial cordal displacement
44:12
of one hemi pelvis
44:13
and in this patient the posterior ring is
44:15
disrupted through the sacrum.
44:17
The anterior ring is disrupted through the sacro
44:19
through the pubic rami with in impact techic symphysis.
44:24
This is another patient you can see bilateral
44:26
cranial cordal MA alignment.
44:28
So this hemi pelvis on the left side has more cran compared
44:32
to that on the sacrum.
44:34
So you can see that the cranial cordal alignment
44:36
of the sacrum and iliac bone is lost.
44:38
So this left he pelvis is cranial migrated.
44:40
The right he pelvis is also cranial migrated.
44:43
So this patient has bilateral vertical
44:45
shared type of an injury.
44:47
There is widening of the left sacroiliac joint which suggest
44:50
that there is some form of a PC injury.
44:52
There is a lateral compression type two
44:54
injury on the right side.
44:56
So this patient has bilateral vertical share.
44:59
Left-sided A PC right-sided lateral compression.
45:02
This is a combined injury mechanism
45:05
and that's why we do not sub classify combined
45:07
because combined automatically make it the most severe type
45:11
of a pelvic ring.
45:13
Again, another patient with combined injury you can see
45:15
pubic symphysis diastasis,
45:17
you can see cranial cordial malalignment of the pelvis.
45:20
You can see the pubic MI fracture.
45:21
On the right side you can see the crescent fracture.
45:24
On the right side you can see widening
45:26
of the sacro joint on the right side.
45:28
So patient has a variable A PC lc one, two
45:31
and vertical share injury.
45:32
This is a combined type of injury.
45:35
Now the next part of of my talk is about pelvic binder.
45:40
Why to use it and what are the disadvantage of using it?
45:44
So this is pelvic binder,
45:46
pelvic circumferential compression device.
45:51
It is a standard of care.
45:53
Pre-hospital care in many countries
45:56
in my country the pelvic binders are not placed as a part
46:00
of the pre-hospital care
46:02
but it is placed in the emergency room
46:05
after doing the first x-ray.
46:07
So we will always have a pre binder,
46:10
the post binder x-ray in our patients,
46:12
which will make our life relatively easier.
46:14
And I'll tell you why it basically what it does is
46:17
that any fracture which opens up the pelvis,
46:20
which is basically the volume expanding family,
46:23
which is the volume expanding family, all APCs one, two
46:26
and three and lateral compression type three.
46:28
These four fracture types are volume expanding family,
46:31
it reduces the open book, closes it
46:34
and makes rotationally unstable fracture
46:37
relatively stable fracture.
46:38
So it also stable.
46:40
So initially it was used primarily for a PC type of injury.
46:44
However we realize that it also helps in active bleed
46:48
by providing hemostasis.
46:50
It also helps by preventing further vascular
46:53
and soft tissue damage.
46:54
And so it can potentially help also in the lateral
46:59
compression and vertical share injury.
47:00
So currently the pelvic binder is placed pretty much in
47:05
any pelvic injury whether it's a PC lc or vertical.
47:09
She initially we thought that what lateral compression,
47:12
because it's already reducing the pelvic volume
47:16
and adding the pelvic binder might reduce the pelvic volume
47:19
further and may worsen the pelvic uh,
47:22
lateral compression injury.
47:23
However, it doesn't happen in real life.
47:25
So we are also using it in the lateral
47:28
compression type of injury.
47:29
What to look for when the patient has a pelvic binder
47:32
and CT to look for the position of the binder,
47:34
whether it's a correctly placed or not
47:36
and we'll learn how to look for it And we how to
47:39
the pelvic binder, because it closes the pelvic ring injury,
47:43
it will mask the severity of the A PC injury.
47:47
So a APC three might start looking like two
47:49
and two might start looking like one
47:51
and one might start looking like no AP PC at all.
47:55
So we have to understand how to unask this injuries.
47:58
So first of all, let's see how to look
48:01
for the correct binder position.
48:02
So for that you have to draw a line on the CT
48:06
or the x-ray from the top of the greater roc enterer,
48:10
which is the red line from the bottom
48:12
of the greater roc enterer, which is the green line.
48:14
And then you look at the binder buckle.
48:17
If the binder has a buckle, look for the buckle.
48:19
And then you look for the center of the buckle,
48:21
which is this blue line between this two spring.
48:24
This blue line should ideally between the red
48:28
and the green line when the binder is correctly placed.
48:31
So what does it mean in this patient?
48:33
The binder is slightly cran placed in the ideal position
48:37
and that is the information you can provide to your trauma t
48:41
that this binder is slightly mal position,
48:44
but that is what is for them to reflect
48:46
to putting the binder next time.
48:49
As I told you, the second big disadvantage for us that it,
48:53
it is a standard of care like it is,
48:55
there is no question about that binders sales lives.
48:58
So we will see more and more pelvic city with a binder.
49:01
So we have to learn that how to unmask the injury.
49:05
As I told you, APC one might look like normal
49:08
APC two might look like one and three might look like two.
49:11
So we how to look for certain indirect evidence of the
49:16
unstable injury on those patients with parents.
49:18
So what to look for hard signs and soft signs.
49:21
Hard signs include residual malalignment of pubic symphysis
49:24
and sacroiliac joint and avulsion at the site
49:27
of those ligaments.
49:29
The pub symphysis ligament si ligaments,
49:31
the pelvic floor ligament, iliolumbar ligament
49:33
and soft sign include rectus muscle, uls retroperitoneal,
49:37
pelvic hematoma, vascular injury,
49:38
and the lower urinary tract injury.
49:40
So this is an excellent uh, uh, uh, illustration prepared
49:43
by the preop pal and the, and the uh, uh, Dr.
49:48
Uba. And you can see that anterior we look
49:51
for the residual pubic symphysis, diastasis or MA alignment
49:54
and we look for peri pubic hematoma
49:58
or AULs of the, uh, of the pubic symphysis.
50:02
We also look for the UL injury
50:05
of the sacral tubera sacrospinous ligament at the sacral
50:08
attachment at the tal spines, uh, at the tal tuberosity
50:13
or we look for the uls injury of the iliolumbar ligament,
50:16
uh, as a transverse process.
50:18
L five fracture transverse process L four fracture
50:21
or we look for the SI joint diastasis
50:23
and uh, SI joint ligament as a.
50:26
So let's try to see how to unask the injury in this patient.
50:29
You can see there is bilateral asymmetry of the si.
50:32
There is subtle SI widely in this patient with the binder
50:35
and there is a, a sian injury
50:37
of the ints sacroiliac ligament.
50:40
So this suggests that this is a high grade A PC injury.
50:43
Again, this patient you can see there is a bilateral
50:46
asymmetry of the SI joint, right looks wider compared
50:49
to the left all the way from the front to back,
50:51
which suggests high grade SI joint injury.
50:54
This patient also has the, uh,
50:57
lower urinary tract injury suggested by extra
50:59
of the contrast, which suggests
51:01
that this patient has a highly unstable injury.
51:04
This patient has the injury at the attachment
51:06
of the sacral spinous ligament from sacral attachment side.
51:10
This patient has a big pelvic retroperitoneal hematoma.
51:13
Again, a sign of a grossly unstable injury.
51:16
This patient has an active contrast extravasation
51:19
with a large pelvic retroperitoneal hematoma.
51:22
Again, it suggests unstable injury irrespective whether you
51:25
see the dislocation or not.
51:27
This patient has a residual cranial cordal
51:29
and the transverse mal alignment or diastasis.
51:32
Also, this patient has a versions
51:34
of the pubic symphysis ligament.
51:36
This patient you can see peri pubic hematoma.
51:39
You can see why the hematoma of the,
51:42
of the rectus muscle at the attachment of the pubic bone
51:45
and the attach and the uh, hematoma of the inguinal canal,
51:49
hematoma of the pubic Plato.
51:52
Uh, there is a role for binder of imaging,
51:54
however, it's a controversial an examination.
51:57
Anesthesia can be performed once patient is stabilized.
52:00
So don't beat a hurry.
52:02
This should be done only when the
52:03
final stabilization is planned.
52:06
But the last part is the stability instability spectrum.
52:09
And what are the management implication?
52:11
So the stability and instability
52:13
of the pelvis is a dynamic concept.
52:16
What I mean is that pelvis is considered stable
52:20
if it does not deform on weight bearing or routine activity
52:24
or there is painless activity, painless movement
52:28
or painless weight bearing.
52:30
So when there is no pain
52:31
or deformity when patient starts walking
52:33
or when patient is weight bearing,
52:35
that is a considered as a stable pelvis.
52:38
Anything other than that is a unstable pelvis.
52:40
So basically the stability is uh,
52:44
not a radiological concept, it's a clinical concept.
52:47
Imaging can tell us,
52:50
tell the surgeons whether the pelvis is stable or unstable.
52:54
However, we have to remember that the CT
52:57
and x-ray based on which we determine the stability
53:00
or instability are static imaging modality
53:03
done without weight bearing.
53:04
And so it may overlook this instability when it's a subtle
53:09
or it'll underestimate the instability when it is severe.
53:14
And another thing is stability is not a binary concept.
53:17
So you don't have like stable patients
53:19
and unstable patients.
53:20
There's a lot of gray zone
53:22
between the stability and unstability.
53:26
The second thing, as I said is that each
53:29
fracture surplus can also have an instability spectrum.
53:33
So lc one is not a single fracture, it's a spectrum
53:36
of injury varying from stable
53:39
to unstable same way lc two is, uh,
53:43
is a spectrum varying from stable to unstable
53:46
and similarly APC one, two and three as well.
53:50
So in terms of biomechanics, we consider pelvis
53:53
as stable when posterior ring is intact.
53:55
Partially unstable when posterior ring is at least partially
53:58
disrupted and totally unstable when posterior ring is
54:02
completely disrupted.
54:05
As I already mentioned
54:06
that the pelvic instability is not a radiological
54:11
diagnosis, though we can infer instability based on direct
54:14
and indirect evidence by diastasis
54:16
of the pubic symphysis unstable fracture.
54:18
Astro seia joint all ligament is a sance vascular injuries.
54:23
The lower urinary tract injuries,
54:25
those are the radiological surrogate markers
54:28
of unstable pelvis.
54:30
However, we have to understand
54:32
that it's basically a clinical diagnosis.
54:34
And so there is a role for dynamic imaging,
54:37
which includes stress views or examination of anesthesia
54:40
or intraop fluoroscopy, which will give us an idea
54:44
to completely unask the injury when we underestimate
54:48
or we completely negate the injury.
54:51
So management, early goal
54:53
of management include bleeding controls.
54:55
So dynamic which includes the the resuscitation
54:59
and stabilization and final goal is
55:02
to provide mechanically stable pelvis.
55:04
So how to do that.
55:06
So for bleeding prevention
55:07
or bleeding control, this the concept is damage control
55:11
resuscitation, DCR, it can be done either by pelvic packing,
55:14
by laparotomy, by re boa or trans arterial embolization.
55:18
When we think that the pelvis is the culprit damage control
55:21
stabilization, which will also help introducing the, the,
55:24
the which will prevent the further hemorrhage includes
55:27
binder sheets, uh, external fixator,
55:29
the C clamps and the rescue screw.
55:32
Definite stabilization and reconstructions are based on the
55:36
biomechanical EO principles.
55:37
So it, when we, when we try
55:40
to look at the pelvis from a stability perspective,
55:42
the black and white concept is that APC one
55:45
and LC one are stable.
55:46
AP C two lc two are partially stable.
55:49
APC three, lc three and vertical shape share are the grossly
55:52
unstable our real life.
55:54
It's not true. APC one
55:56
and LC one has a spectrum which ranges from
56:00
stable two unstable injuries.
56:02
Same way APC two
56:03
and lc two have a range from partially
56:05
unstable to globally unstable.
56:07
And same way the APC three and bed. Why this happened?
56:11
Because the body has soft tissues
56:13
and soft tissues have elastic recoil.
56:16
So the actual violence which happens at the time
56:18
of injury will recoil back the bones, comes back
56:22
to its original position at least as much as possible.
56:25
The joints try to go back to its original position
56:28
because there is a inherent elastic recall the soft tissue.
56:31
And that is where when the A PC injuries,
56:36
they did the stress imaging, 50% of the A PC one
56:40
where a PC two injuries, 50%
56:43
of the APC two were almost 39%
56:47
of the APC two were APC three injuries.
56:49
And almost 37 to 60%
56:52
of the lc one injuries were unstable injury.
56:55
So these are the injuries which we consider as a stable
56:57
or very minimally unstable or partially unstable.
57:00
However, under stress imaging, this injuries turn out
57:03
to be much more severe than what it shows on imaging
57:07
because of the elastic record.
57:09
So remember that whatever you are seeing, showing
57:11
or writing in your report is underestimation
57:15
of the actual injury.
57:18
What are the principles, uh,
57:19
of the AO principle include anatomical reduction
57:22
to restore the shape, to fix the instability,
57:25
and to restore the weight bearing excess
57:27
of the, of the pelvis.
57:29
And so this is what we do.
57:31
So definitive reconstruction can be done anterior only,
57:34
posterior only circumferential,
57:35
anterior plus posterior or spinal or pelvic.
57:38
Where we try to do from L five to sacrum to pelvic,
57:42
definitely reconstruction can be done by closed.
57:45
Uh, uh, the definitive the the reduction can be done
57:49
by closed or open anterior or posterior.
57:51
Same way the reconstruct can be done
57:53
by percutaneous screw fixation plates and s screw fixation.
57:56
So these are the different ways it can be done.
57:58
So this is the, the first x-ray shows the spine
58:00
or pelvic type of reconstruction posteriorly.
58:03
And per the, the, the pubic phis,
58:05
they have done the plating.
58:07
This is an external fixation, which is a, which is a part
58:09
of the, the, not the permanent ins,
58:12
the permanent stabilization,
58:13
but the temporary stabilization anteriorly plating the
58:17
posteriorly plating,
58:19
anteriorly plating the laterally plating
58:21
posteriorly screw fixation.
58:23
And this is the, the, the spinal pelvic fixation
58:26
by putting the plates
58:27
and screws from the L four L five sacrum through SOH
58:30
as I joined to the pelvis.
58:33
So what we learned today is review the anatomy
58:36
and biomechanics of how the ligaments provide stability
58:41
to the bones
58:42
and joints, how to do imaging, how x-rays are useful
58:47
and when to do ct.
58:48
And how to do ct. We learned about two classification,
58:51
but primarily youngberg is classification.
58:55
We learn about CT systematic search pattern
58:59
and by learning that ring always breaks at two points, how
59:02
to predict the injury.
59:04
When you diagnose one injury, you can predict
59:08
or reflective identification
59:10
of the other injury based on the, on the mechanism
59:13
of injury, how binders can potentially mask the injury
59:17
and how to unask the engineering, how to say
59:19
that the binders are appropriately placed or not.
59:22
How to decide the stability, instability
59:24
and why stability in stability is not a binary concept,
59:28
but a spectrum and what does it mean
59:30
to the surgeon when they're managing it.
59:34
So this is all, um, I hope, uh, it was useful to you
59:38
and I would be happy to take, uh
59:41
any questions any one of you have.
59:43
Thank you so much.
59:45
Thank you so much, Dr. Ranga. Yes.
59:47
At this time, we will be opening the floor
59:49
for any questions from our audience,
59:50
and you may submit your questions
59:52
through the q and a feature.
59:54
And Dr. Ranga, I don't know if you see the, uh, q and A
59:58
Tool? I can
59:59
actually, yeah, yeah. So in excess, the recording.
60:03
Okay. So this, the first few are yours. Um, okay. Okay.
60:07
All unstable fractures are given binders
60:10
or only those with a PC up.
60:12
So Anisha, uh, well, it started with a PC injuries,
60:16
but currently we are pretty much putting this pelvic binder
60:20
in almost all pelvic fractures.
60:22
In fact, just like we put the cervical collar,
60:25
pelvic binder is placed in many places as a part
60:28
of the pre-hospital care.
60:30
So patient just comes with the cervical collar
60:32
that comes with the pelvic binder.
60:34
My hospital, where I work, it's not part
60:36
of the pre-hospital care.
60:37
So we put in some patients after they come to the ER
60:41
after the, in the trauma bay, they do the first x-ray.
60:44
And when the x-ray shows some form of stable
60:47
or unstable pelvic injury, any type of injury,
60:50
they could be pelvic binder, uh, studying for care.
60:54
Yeah. Thank you. Okay. Yeah, so far, uh,
60:58
Um, there's the QA feature that is very close.
61:01
Okay. Okay. I can, yeah. Uh, more, no, I don't see it.
61:07
Chat, uh, chat. I can see the chat. It's, uh, the q Okay.
61:12
Let me close the chat. Okay. Um, more.
61:16
Okay, let me go more, uh, yeah, qn. Okay, fine. Sorry.
61:20
Thanks. Yeah, thanks. I can see it now. No problem. Okay.
61:23
Is pubic re fracture seen in a PC also
61:26
as ligament fracture can?
61:27
Yes. So, uh, it's a good question.
61:29
So pubic re fracture can occur in a PC injuries.
61:34
It is correct, however, just to make
61:38
everyone's life relatively simpler
61:40
and show you the more of a, a rule-based teaching.
61:43
I told that the A PC is primary diastasis
61:46
of the pubic bone rather than the fractures.
61:48
Alternatively, pubic bend can also fracture when pubic bone
61:53
fracture in a PC injury.
61:54
The fractures have a slightly different pattern compared
61:58
to the fractures which you see in the
62:00
lateral compression fracture.
62:01
So those fractures have more of a diastasis,
62:04
they separate from each other rather than the segmental
62:08
or overlapping type of fractures.
62:10
What you typically see in the lateral compression, so
62:14
what I, what I say, that
62:16
whenever you see multiple fractures, bilateral fractures,
62:19
segmental fractures of the pubic re mi overlapping
62:23
of the fractures, uh, uh,
62:25
those fractures suggest lateral compression.
62:27
However, if I see a pubic bone fracture
62:30
or pubic re mi fracture with breast distraction
62:33
of the fracture fragment,
62:36
it is possibly an a PC injury.
62:38
Same way, vertical share also can have a fracture, um, uh,
62:43
of the pubic re mi.
62:45
However, in those patients,
62:46
the pubic cre mi fracture will have more
62:49
cranial cordal malalignment.
62:51
When you look at three types of fractures,
62:53
a PC vertical share
62:54
and the lateral compression,
62:55
lateral compression injuries are commonest injuries.
62:58
So statistically majority of the patients,
63:00
when you see a pubic bone fractures, pubic fractures,
63:04
it is actually lateral compression injuries.
63:06
AP C injuries are second commonest injury,
63:08
but the pubic ssis frac, uh, widening
63:11
or diastasis is much more common compared
63:13
to the pubic fracture.
63:15
And that, and the vertical share is,
63:17
is the least common type of fracture.
63:19
Um, and whenever you see cranial cordial mal alignment
63:21
of the posterior ring,
63:23
and then you see the anterior ring injury, you,
63:26
you look at the cranial cordial
63:27
mal alignment of the fracture.
63:29
Yes. So that is if patient go
63:33
to ct, why plan x-ray?
63:35
You still need it. Yeah, that's a, that's a good question.
63:38
Uh, um, well, uh, there is plenty
63:41
of literature in recent years
63:43
and people have come up with different protocols.
63:46
There are places where they have stopped doing
63:48
pelvic x-rays.
63:50
However, A TLS, uh, American trauma, uh, uh, uh,
63:54
society, uh, uh, uh, guidelines,
63:57
A TLS guidelines still suggest
63:59
that do pelvic x-rays in all patients.
64:02
As I said, pelvic x-rays help you to try the patients.
64:05
So patients who are moreally unstable, they will directly go
64:09
to IR or, or, uh, that helps sometimes in, in, uh,
64:13
diagnosing unstable fractures,
64:15
sometimes in CT protocol optimization.
64:18
But you're right, just like you, many people have questions.
64:21
There are, there are trauma centers
64:23
who have stopped doing it.
64:25
We are doing it. Um, it's very low cost, uh,
64:30
uh, examination.
64:31
It gives, um, uh, amazing information.
64:34
Um, uh, it's, it's one of my favorite examination, like, so,
64:38
so far we are doing it,
64:39
but, uh, uh, there are a few centers who don't do it.
64:42
Yes, but anyone who is following a TLS guidelines
64:44
as they're doing it, it's just like
64:46
for vi spine later radiograph, everyone does it.
64:48
The patient gets in the pan CT or,
64:51
or they do the chest radiograph though, they're going
64:53
to do the pan ct because those are the life threatening,
64:58
uh, checklist again.
65:00
Okay. So I'll, I'll come back to that probably at the end,
65:03
like, uh, so you can take a screenshot of that checklist
65:07
of the x-ray and the ct.
65:09
Uh, is is MRI, uh, helpful in pelvic trauma patient?
65:13
Um, well, uh, there is no straight answer.
65:16
Um, MRI has been done, um, uh,
65:20
in some centers, in some studies it does show
65:24
few more injuries than
65:25
what you can see on CT in high velocity injuries,
65:29
pelvic ring injuries, it shows ligamentous injuries, uh,
65:33
slightly better than CT people who have done it.
65:37
However, it is,
65:40
it does not add any further value than what CT provides.
65:44
So, um, um, uh, when,
65:46
when the CT looks grossly unstable, uh,
65:49
those patients are grossly unstable.
65:51
When CT looks completely normal in binder ct,
65:55
probably MRI might show some edema along the ligaments,
65:58
probably, which might suggest that this patient has a low
66:00
grade injury.
66:02
The pelvic MRI has definitely some role when it comes
66:05
to elderly patient with ground level fall
66:08
and low velocity injury.
66:10
So those are the patients when the, the sacral fracture is
66:14
so subtle, you don't see it on the x-ray and even on the CT
66:18
because of osteoporotic bone,
66:20
either you can do a dual source CT
66:22
or you can do an MRI, uh, David Drazin
66:25
and their, their group has, has, uh, uh, from that, uh,
66:28
Madeline Trauma Center have done this study on role
66:31
of dual source ct, which shows bone marrow edema
66:34
and the ligamentous levels in site edema.
66:37
Uh, as an alternative to mr,
66:39
they have some promising result,
66:41
but none of this is standard of care.
66:43
So the standard of care is x-rays in all patients,
66:46
ct in all patients who can undergo CT MR, MRI is
66:49
so far not in the algorithm.
66:52
Some role in, in patients who are elderly, uh,
66:55
with ground level fall, low velocity injury,
66:58
and, uh, subtle fractures, which can be overlooked.
67:03
Thank you. Um, what about the stress
67:06
or insufficiency fracture?
67:08
Absolutely, so those patients, uh, definitely we do
67:12
x-rays followed by ct.
67:13
So, uh, uh, well, uh, it all depends like, um, so
67:17
after x-ray, you can go to MR directly or you go to ct.
67:21
All of my patient undergoes ct, uh, uh, uh,
67:24
for several reasons, simply because like MR.
67:27
Service may not be available 24 7.
67:28
That's one of the reasons. And CT is easy to perform
67:31
as quick, so we do CT in all patients.
67:33
Um, and then Mr, in those patients who, who CT negative, uh,
67:38
uh, we can do that.
67:39
We have, we have the dual source, we do dual source, uh, um,
67:43
again, not one of the biggest fan of, uh, uh,
67:46
of dual source in diagnosing, uh, um, the, uh, uh, the,
67:50
the AL fractures, uh, uh, it just tell me where to look
67:54
for the fracture on the plain ct,
67:55
like all the no on the single, uh, source ct.
67:59
So, uh, yes, absolutely there is MRI has some role in,
68:02
in those patients, old age low velocity
68:05
and pediatric poly fractures.
68:06
Absolutely. I completely agree with that.
68:08
Uh, uh, it's, it's completely different, old age,
68:11
low velocity and pediatric pelvic fractures.
68:13
And, and, um, um, I just wanted to start
68:17
with something which is like a, a typical age group
68:20
and typical type of injuries I see in my daily practice.
68:23
Um, so, uh, I, I started
68:25
with this in the high velocity young patients, uh,
68:27
but we do have a very good number
68:29
of p pediatric pelvic fractures.
68:31
We do have a good number of, uh, elderly patients
68:34
with pelu fractures as well.
68:35
So, um, hopefully sometime, um, um,
68:38
in the future we, we'll talk about this.
68:41
Yes, all osteoporotic fractures
68:42
are completely different as well.
68:44
Uh, I, I, I completely agree with that.
68:46
So probably pretty much, uh, all the questions, uh, uh,
68:50
have been answered.
68:52
Um, and I just to quickly show you the,
68:55
the checklist which someone wanted to see.
68:58
So this is how the checklist looks like.
69:01
Uh, uh, this checklist, the radiographic checklist, um, is
69:05
as I told you, available on radio PIA 2023.
69:09
This was prepared by, uh, the prial, one
69:12
of the medical illustrators, which I was talking about.
69:15
And um, uh, this is our poster in 2023 Radio pedia.
69:20
I'm sure it's still there. Um, uh, uh,
69:22
and um, uh, there is a link also so you can just uh,
69:26
uh, take it from there.
69:28
Uh, for the ct, this is what we look for,
69:31
the anterior ring injury
69:33
and uh, pelvic symphysis, how we look for in pubic, uh,
69:36
and the secondary joint, how we look for,
69:38
so this is our CT search pattern in the checklist.
69:41
Um, um, um, if everything will go well, probably by October,
69:45
um, uh, our article on how
69:48
to look at the pelvic CT from the trauma protective,
69:50
what I talk about today, um,
69:53
will be there in the Radiographics as well.
69:55
So hopefully by October, uh, we will have this paper
69:58
as well, maybe article,
69:59
which will be helpful to you in your practice.
70:01
Yeah, thanks. Alright.
70:03
Thank you so much Dr. Ranga.
70:05
Thank you so much for sharing your lecture today
70:07
and taking the time to answer everyone's questions.
70:10
My pleasure. Thanks.
70:11
And thank you to all for participating in our noon
70:14
conference and asking such great questions.
70:16
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70:18
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70:20
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70:21
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70:26
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70:27
March 27th at 12:00 PM Eastern,
70:30
where Dr. John Jacobson will deliver a lecture entitled
70:33
Ultrasound of Peripheral Nerve Entrapment.
70:35
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70:38
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70:39
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70:41
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