Fracture of the pelvis may be serious not only in and of itself but because of frequently accompanying injuries to the various pelvic viscera. Save in the possible separations that may occur during parturition it is always the result of direct violence. Such injuries are usually divided into fractures of the pelvic girdle and those of the more exposed prominences, such as the iliac crest, the ischiac tuberosity, the coccyx, etc. Lines of fracture may run at any point, although it is at the synchondrosis that the pelvis is usually broken loose from the sacrum. As in the skull and the lower jaw double fractures or even comminutions may occur. The same considerations concerning the transmission of serious violence may account for some of the vagaries seen in these cases. The sacrum is usually broken as the result of great violence. The pelvic girdle is perhaps weakest opposite the joints and in the neighborhood of the pubis. Here there may be a separation of the symphysis, but the break usually occurs a little to one side of the middle line. In rare instances the head of the femur has been forced through the acetabulum ([Fig. 308]).

In a general way fractures of the pelvic girdle can be recognized not merely by local evidences of injury and shock, but by the resulting more or less complete loss of function; patients will be disabled in proportion to the violence and extent of the injury. The more unilateral the symptoms the easier it is to localize the site of the injury. Mobility can often be detected upon examination, sometimes crepitus. This is essentially true of fractures of the pubis. Occasionally combined manipulation, with a finger in the rectum or vagina, will permit more accurate localization of the injury. When the crest of the pelvis is fractured, or any of the parts to which the abdominal muscles are inserted, then the patient will be still further disabled in movements of the lower part of the body, while by palpation the fracture is sometimes easily determined.

Not the least serious features of these injuries are those which pertain to the viscera. These include not only the ordinary results of abdominal contusions which may produce all sorts of harm, for example, ruptures of the kidneys, spleen, or liver, but also more localized lesions, such as ruptures of the rectum, bladder, or urethra, or even the pelvic connective tissue. If the urinary passages be torn there is always opportunity for urinary infiltration and infection. The same is true of the rectum so far as possibility of infection is concerned. Therefore one of the earliest maneuvers in dealing with such a case should be the passage of a catheter, to determine if the urine be bloody or the urethra obstructed. In such a case, in the male at least, it will usually be wise to make a perineal section and to open widely and then drain the bladder. In not a few of these instances the laceration takes place internally, and a pelvic crushing injury, which is followed by collapse and abdominal rigidity, without satisfactory explanation as above, should be promptly explored by abdominal section, the danger of doing it being considerably less than the risk of leaving it undone.

Fig. 308

Fracture of pelvis. (Mudd.)

Fig. 309

Great deformity after multiple fracture of femur, with synostosis. (From the Buffalo Museum.)

Some of these fractures are conspicuously compound, and the treatment for the external wound will permit of more careful exploration of the bone injury, as well perhaps as the insertion of wire sutures or other means of fixation.