• Spine · Jan 2005

    Case Reports

    Lumbar chance fracture in an adult snowboarder: unusual mechanism of a chance fracture.

    • Koji Okamoto, Minoru Doita, Masaho Yoshikawa, Michihiko Manabe, Norihide Sha, and Shinichi Yoshiya.
    • Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Kanebo Memorial Hospital, Japan.
    • Spine. 2005 Jan 15; 30 (2): E56-9.

    Study DesignA case of a Chance fracture in an adult snowboarder following a fall is presented. The mechanism of this fracture is reported.ObjectiveTo increase awareness of the spinal injuries in snowboarders and to propose the mechanism of this unusual fracture.Summary Of Background DataChance fractures rarely occur in adults and are very unusual in children. Nearly all of the reported cases are in conjunction with lap-type seat belt injuries. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of a lumbar Chance fracture in an adult snowboarder.MethodsA 25-year-old snowboarder sustained an L1 Chance fracture following a fall backward. The patient was placed in a hyperextension cast, and the cast was changed to a thoracolumbar orthosis after 12 weeks.ResultsComplete bony union was obtained with body cast immobilization, and an excellent functional restoration was obtained.ConclusionsChance fractures are horizontal splitting fractures of the posterior elements of the vertebrae, and the mechanism of the injury is that of a hyperflexion of the spine over a fulcrum. A Chance-type fracture can be seen in an adult snowboarder, when acute hyperflexion of the spine occurs following a fall backward.

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