Abstract

Open-book fractures are defined as the separation of the pubic symphysis or fractures of the rami and disruption of the anterior sacroiliac, sacrotuberous, and sacrospinal ligaments. They can be stabilized by fixation of the anterior arch. However, indications and advantages of additional placement of iliosacral screws remain unknown. A CT-based model of the healthy pelvis was created and ligaments were modeled as tension springs. Range of motion of the sacroiliac joint and the pubic symphysis, and bone and implant stresses were compared for the physiological model, anterior symphyseal plating alone, and additional posterior fixation using two iliosacral screws. The range of motion of the sacroiliac joint was reduced for anterior symphyseal plating alone and further decrease was noted with additional posterior fixation. Von Mises stresses acting on the symphyseal plate were 819.7 MPa for anterior fixation only and 711.56 MPa for additional posterior fixation equivalent with a safety factor of 1.1 and 1.26, respectively. Implant stresses were highest parasymphyseal. While bone stresses exhibited a more homogeneous distribution in the model of the healthy pelvis and the model with anterior and posterior fixation, pure symphyseal plating resulted in bending at the pelvic rami. The analysis does not indicate the superiority of either anterior plating alone or additional posterior fixation. In both cases, the physiological range of motion of the sacroiliac joint is permanently limited, which should be taken into account with regard to implant removal or more flexible techniques for stabilization of the sacroiliac joint.

Highlights

  • The sacrum was divided in the midsagittal plane [38] and, to be careful not to disturb the mechanical behavior of the pubic symphysis, a small part of the right side up to the rami was included in the model in a similar approach to Salzar et al [39]

  • The results of the in silico model presented in this study show that static fixation of the sacroiliac joint significantly reduces the physiological range of motion

  • Symphyseal plating with locking screws might be sufficient in order to stabilize common open-book injuries, but implantation of sacroiliac screws can increase the stability of the sacroiliac joint in more complex cases

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Summary

Introduction

Received: 4 October 2021Accepted: 3 November 2021Published: 5 November 2021Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/).Although pelvic fractures make up only 3–8% of all fractures [1,2], fractures of the pelvic ring represent a clinical challenge and are associated with a high number of complications [3,4]. Pelvic fractures are mostly caused by accidents in young patients [5] and by falls in older patients [6]. The type of fracture depends on the direction of impact: The

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