Apophyseal avulsion fractures of the pelvis and hip
Disclosures
- updated 24 Aug 2022:
Nothing to disclose
Updates to Article Attributes
Body
was changed:
Apophyseal avulsion fractures of the pelvis and hip are relatively common among physically active adolescents and young adults.
Epidemiology
Pelvic and hip apophyseal injuries typically occur in the 14 to 25 year age range.
Mechanism
Kicking sports, such as soccer, and gymnastics are frequently implicated.
Pathology
Sudden forceful muscular contraction causes avulsion of the apophysis to which the tendon attaches.
Sites of avulsion
- iliac crest: anterior abdominal wall muscles
- anterior superior iliac spine: tensor fascia lata and sartorius
- anterior inferior iliac spine: straight head of rectus femoris
- greater trochanter: gluteus medius and gluteus minimus
- lesser trochanter: iliopsoas muscle
- ischial tuberosity: hamstring muscles
- body and inferior ramus of pubis: thigh adductors and gracilis
See also
-<p><strong>Apophyseal avulsion fractures of the pelvis and hip</strong> are relatively common among physically active adolescents and young adults.</p><h4>Epidemiology</h4><p>Pelvic and hip apophyseal injuries typically occur in the 14 to 25 year age range.</p><h4>Mechanism</h4><p>Kicking sports, such as soccer, and gymnastics are frequently implicated.</p><h4>Pathology</h4><p>Sudden forceful muscular contraction causes avulsion of the <a href="/articles/apophysis">apophysis</a> to which the tendon attaches.</p><h5>Sites of avulsion</h5><ul>-<li>-<a href="/articles/iliac-crest-avulsion">iliac crest</a>: anterior abdominal wall muscles</li>-<li>-<a href="/articles/anterior-superior-iliac-spine-avulsion-injury">anterior superior iliac spine</a>: <a href="/articles/tensor-fasciae-latae-muscle">tensor fascia lata</a> and <a href="/articles/sartorius-muscle">sartorius</a>-</li>-<li>-<a href="/articles/anterior-inferior-iliac-spine-avulsion-injury">anterior inferior iliac spine</a>: straight head of <a href="/articles/rectus-femoris-muscle">rectus femoris</a>-</li>-<li>-<a href="/articles/greater-trochanter">greater trochanter</a>: <a href="/articles/gluteus-medius-muscle">gluteus medius</a> and <a href="/articles/gluteus-minimus-muscle">gluteus minimus</a>-</li>-<li>-<a href="/articles/lesser-trochanter">lesser trochanter</a>: <a href="/articles/iliopsoas">iliopsoas</a> muscle</li>-<li>-<a href="/articles/ischial-avulsion-injury-1">ischial tuberosity</a>: <a href="/articles/hamstring-muscles">hamstring</a> muscles</li>-<li>body and inferior ramus of <a href="/articles/pubis">pubis</a>: thigh adductors and <a href="/articles/gracilis-muscle">gracilis</a>-</li>- +<p><strong>Apophyseal avulsion fractures of the pelvis and hip</strong> are relatively common among physically active adolescents and young adults.</p><h4>Epidemiology</h4><p>Pelvic and hip apophyseal injuries typically occur in the 14 to 25 year age range.</p><h4>Mechanism</h4><p>Kicking sports, such as soccer, and gymnastics are frequently implicated.</p><h4>Pathology</h4><p>Sudden forceful muscular contraction causes avulsion of the <a href="/articles/apophysis">apophysis</a> to which the tendon attaches.</p><h5>Sites of avulsion</h5><ul>
- +<li>
- +<a href="/articles/iliac-crest-avulsion">iliac crest</a>: anterior abdominal wall muscles</li>
- +<li>
- +<a href="/articles/anterior-superior-iliac-spine-avulsion-injury">anterior superior iliac spine</a>: <a href="/articles/tensor-fasciae-latae-muscle">tensor fascia lata</a> and <a href="/articles/sartorius-muscle">sartorius</a>
- +</li>
- +<li>
- +<a href="/articles/anterior-inferior-iliac-spine-avulsion-injury">anterior inferior iliac spine</a>: straight head of <a href="/articles/rectus-femoris-muscle">rectus femoris</a>
- +</li>
- +<li>
- +<a href="/articles/greater-trochanter">greater trochanter</a>: <a href="/articles/gluteus-medius-muscle">gluteus medius</a> and <a href="/articles/gluteus-minimus-muscle">gluteus minimus</a>
- +</li>
- +<li>
- +<a href="/articles/lesser-trochanter">lesser trochanter</a>: <a href="/articles/iliopsoas">iliopsoas</a> muscle</li>
- +<li>
- +<a href="/articles/ischial-avulsion-injury-1">ischial tuberosity</a>: <a href="/articles/hamstring-muscles">hamstring</a> muscles</li>
- +<li>body and inferior ramus of <a href="/articles/pubis">pubis</a>: thigh adductors and <a href="/articles/gracilis-muscle">gracilis</a>
- +</li>
Images Changes:
Image 7 Annotated image ( update )
Caption
was changed:
Case 6: ischial tuberosity (right(left)