1. Insufficiency fractures of the ilium.
- Author
-
Chary-Valckenaere I, Blum A, Péré P, Grigon B, Pourel J, and Gaucher A
- Subjects
- Acetabulum diagnostic imaging, Acetabulum injuries, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Alkaline Phosphatase blood, Calcifediol blood, Calcium urine, Diagnostic Errors, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Fractures, Spontaneous etiology, Fractures, Spontaneous metabolism, Humans, Ilium diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Osteoporosis blood, Osteoporosis complications, Osteoporosis urine, Radionuclide Imaging, Retrospective Studies, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Vitamin D Deficiency blood, Vitamin D Deficiency complications, Vitamin D Deficiency urine, Fractures, Spontaneous diagnosis, Ilium injuries
- Abstract
Insufficiency fractures often occur in the sacrum and pubic rami but have rarely been reported in the ilium, where their frequency may be underestimated. We studied a series of 14 patients with insufficiency fractures of the ilium. Six patients had an oblique fracture through the wing of the ilium (which was bilateral in one case) and nine a supraacetabular fracture, with in one case a superomedial extension into the iliac wing. The initial radiographs were normal, making the diagnosis difficult. A linear area of sclerosis along the fracture line was seen after a few weeks. The radionuclide examination provided early detection and often demonstrated multiple insufficiency fractures (mean 2.1 per patient). Computed tomography missed some of the fractures, whereas magnetic resonance imaging proved a reliable diagnostic tool, especially in patients with supraacetabular fractures, showing the fracture as a line of low signal surrounded by an area of edema whose contours were exactly the same as those of the hyperactive focus on the radionuclide scan. Osteoporosis was a causative factor in all 14 patients and vitamin D deficiency in seven. Also, three patients had a history of fluoride therapy.
- Published
- 1997