• Injury · Aug 2022

    The direct posterior gluteal muscle splitting approach for posterior access to acetabular fractures: Surgical technique and case series.

    • Kyla Huebner, Michael F McTague, Elizabeth Allen, Amna Diwan, and Raymond Malcolm Smith.
    • Memorial University of Newfoundland, Eastern Health Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, St Clare, Mercy Hospital, 154 Lemarchant Road, St John's, Newfoundland, Canada.
    • Injury. 2022 Aug 1; 53 (8): 2810-2817.

    AbstractWe present a minimally invasive direct posterior, gluteal muscle splitting approach (PMS) as an alternative to the traditional Kocher-Langenbeck (KL) approach for posterior access to acetabular fractures. We believe it offers significant advantages and provides improved access while maximizing the range of fracture patterns that can be addressed through a posterior approach. One hundred and eighty-four consecutive patients treated with this approach by the senior author (RMS) between 2001 and 2018 were reviewed. The most common individual fracture pattern addressed was a posterior wall (66/36%) but more complex combination fracture types were the dominant group (106/58%), and included transverse with posterior wall, posterior wall / posterior column, and T types. A radiographically congruent reduction was consistently obtained at surgery, without any operative sciatic nerve palsies and a comparable heterotopic bone formation rate to previous reports. We have reviewed all 120 patients who were followed beyond 6 months and noted the hip replacement conversion rates to be different with each fracture type. The rate was highest with Transverse/ posterior wall injuries (36%), 16% of the posterior wall injuries were converted, a history of dislocation was not specifically associated with conversion. We believe this approach improves the posterior access to the acetabulum, but this study also confirms the poor prognosis of specific groups of higher energy multi-fragmentary, posterior acetabular injuries and suggests the need for a classification system that better predicts the prognosis for the hip joint. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 4.Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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