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Original Article
Missed Fractures in Severely Injured Patients
Hee-Gon Park, M.D., Jae-Sung Yoo, M.D., Hyung-Suk Yi, M.D.
Journal of the Korean Fracture Society 2014;27(2):113-119.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.12671/jkfs.2014.27.2.113
Published online: April 18, 2014

Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Dankook University Hospital, Dankook University Medical College, Cheonan, Korea.

Address reprint requests to: Jae-Sung Yoo, M.D. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Dankook University Hospital, 201 Manghyang-ro, Dongnam-gu, Cheonan 330-715, Korea. Tel: 82-41-550-6579, Fax: 82-41-556-3238, idbabe@naver.com
• Received: October 30, 2013   • Revised: December 2, 2013   • Accepted: December 18, 2013

Copyright © 2014 The Korean Fracture Society. All rights reserved.

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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  • Purpose
    The purpose of this study is to analyze anatomic distributions, diagnostic methods, and prognosis of missed fractures in patients with severe injury.
  • Materials and Methods
    A review of single-institutional medical records between January 2001 and May 2012 identified 58 patients with 62 delayed diagnoses of fractures among 4,643 severely injured patients older than 20 years with Injury Severity Scores higher than 16. We evaluated combined injuries, location of fractures, diagnostic methods, and reasons for missed diagnosis at initial exam.
  • Results
    Among 62 missed fractures, there were eight cases of spine fracture, 10 cases of peri-shoulder joint fracture, eight cases of upper extremity fracture, 10 cases of pelvis of acetabulum fracture, and 26 cases of lower extremity fracture. Head injury was the most common concomitant injury (23 cases). Initially missed fractures were most commonly discovered by official reading by radiologists. The most common reasons for misdiagnosis were the use of improper radiologic study and missed-reading of proper radiologic studies.
  • Conclusion
    In order to prevent misdiagnosis of fractures in patients with severe injury, meticulous physical examination with suspicion of fractures should come first. In addition, obtaining proper radiologic study and thorough evaluation of radiologic images are important to decreasing the rates of missed fracture diagnoses. In addition, thorough surveillance for ipsilateral fractures is important in extremities with identified fractures.
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Fig. 1
(A) Antero-posterior and lateral radiographs of the knee in a 42-year-old man show no definite fracture lines. (B) Sagittal and coronal T2-weighted magnetic resonance images show a tibial plateau fracture.
jkfs-27-113-g001.jpg
Fig. 2
(A) Anter-posterior and lateral radiographs of the femur in a 34 year-old man show a femoral shaft fracture. (B) Antero-posterior and lateral radiographs of the femur after the operation show intramedullary nailing fixation. (C) Antero-posterior radiograph of the hip after the operation shows a neglected femoral neck fracture. (D) Antero-posterior radiograph of the hip after the secondary operation shows multiple screw fixation.
jkfs-27-113-g002.jpg
Table 1
Fractures Missed in 56 of 4,643 Polytrauma Patients
jkfs-27-113-i001.jpg

The result of sum showed errors related with rounding off.

Table 2
How the Diagnosis Was Made
jkfs-27-113-i002.jpg

The result of sum showed errors related with rounding off.

Table 3
Reasons for Missing the Diagnosis
jkfs-27-113-i003.jpg

The result of sum showed errors related with rounding off.

Table 4
Patients with More than One Lesion in the Same Extremity
jkfs-27-113-i004.jpg
Table 5
Delay from Accident to the Diagnosis of an Injury
jkfs-27-113-i005.jpg

Figure & Data

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    • Neglected upper-extremity fractures at a severe trauma center in the Republic of Korea
      Dong Hee Kim, Seung Soo Han, Sang Hyun Lee
      Archives of Hand and Microsurgery.2023; 28(4): 233.     CrossRef

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      Missed Fractures in Severely Injured Patients
      J Korean Fract Soc. 2014;27(2):113-119.   Published online April 30, 2014
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    Missed Fractures in Severely Injured Patients
    Image Image
    Fig. 1 (A) Antero-posterior and lateral radiographs of the knee in a 42-year-old man show no definite fracture lines. (B) Sagittal and coronal T2-weighted magnetic resonance images show a tibial plateau fracture.
    Fig. 2 (A) Anter-posterior and lateral radiographs of the femur in a 34 year-old man show a femoral shaft fracture. (B) Antero-posterior and lateral radiographs of the femur after the operation show intramedullary nailing fixation. (C) Antero-posterior radiograph of the hip after the operation shows a neglected femoral neck fracture. (D) Antero-posterior radiograph of the hip after the secondary operation shows multiple screw fixation.
    Missed Fractures in Severely Injured Patients

    Fractures Missed in 56 of 4,643 Polytrauma Patients

    The result of sum showed errors related with rounding off.

    How the Diagnosis Was Made

    The result of sum showed errors related with rounding off.

    Reasons for Missing the Diagnosis

    The result of sum showed errors related with rounding off.

    Patients with More than One Lesion in the Same Extremity

    Delay from Accident to the Diagnosis of an Injury

    Table 1 Fractures Missed in 56 of 4,643 Polytrauma Patients

    The result of sum showed errors related with rounding off.

    Table 2 How the Diagnosis Was Made

    The result of sum showed errors related with rounding off.

    Table 3 Reasons for Missing the Diagnosis

    The result of sum showed errors related with rounding off.

    Table 4 Patients with More than One Lesion in the Same Extremity

    Table 5 Delay from Accident to the Diagnosis of an Injury


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