Missed manubriosternal dislocation in patient with thoracolumbar fracture, a case report

Spine fractures combined with sternal injury are most commonly occur in the thoracic region. Lower cervical and thoracolumbar injuries have also been reported, especially for the patients with manubriosternal dislocation. The type of spine injury is easily recognized in initial presentation, but we...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC surgery 2019-07, Vol.19 (1), p.101-101, Article 101
Hauptverfasser: Jiang, Wei-Yu, Chen, Yun-Lin, Xu, Nan-Jian, Hu, Xu-Dong, Ruan, Chao-Yue, Ma, Wei-Hu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Spine fractures combined with sternal injury are most commonly occur in the thoracic region. Lower cervical and thoracolumbar injuries have also been reported, especially for the patients with manubriosternal dislocation. The type of spine injury is easily recognized in initial presentation, but we may miss the sternal fracture and manubriosternal dislocation. A 23-year-old male patient complained with chest, right ankle, and lumbar pain after a fall at ground level, with diagnosis of right distal tibial fracture, sternal fracture, calcaneus fracture, and L2 vertebral fracture. However, neurologically he was completely normal. He underwent the operation for his lower extremity and spine, but we missed his manubriosternal dislocation after discharged. After one month, he came to the clinic with complained of chest pain, the imaging exams showed anterior dislocation of manubriosternal joint. We chose conservative treatment for manubriosternal dislocation. He was followed up at monthly intervals and radiographs along with computerized tomography showed satisfactory in fracture healing of lumber and the sternal fracture. However, the manubriosternal dislocation was malunioned. The patient had appearance deformity of the manubriosternal joint. This case supports the concept of the existence and clinical relevance of the thoracic cage theory, the thoracolumbar vertebrae should also be included in the thoracic cage theory.
ISSN:1471-2482
1471-2482
DOI:10.1186/s12893-019-0564-y