This 2010 systematic review of 39 biomechanical studies concludes external fixation alone is usually insufficient for unstable pelvic rings and that combined anteriorβposterior constructs (notably robust posterior fixation / two SI screws or triangular osteosynthesis) increase rigidity β but heterogenous cadaver/synthetic models, variable loading protocols, and lack of standardized outcomes limit clinical translation and reproducibility
Note: counts are approximate reconstructions from the review's tables and key-findings (the review lists ~39 studies across categories) β used here to visualise relative research emphasis; see methods citation for original extraction
These illustrative percentages show the reviewβs qualitative conclusions: external frames are typically far below intact rigidity, anterior fixation helps symphysis motion but posterior fixation (two SI screws, triangular constructs) markedly restores stiffness; values are synthesized impressions rather than raw pooled numbers β original studies vary in protocol and exact numbers
Biomechanical evidence summarized by Papathanasopoulos et al. (2010) supports that (1) external fixation alone is usually mechanically insufficient for definitive stabilization of vertically/rotationally unstable pelvic ring injuries, (2) posterior fixation (two SI screws, triangular osteosynthesis, transiliac plates) markedly increases construct rigidity and load-to-failure in many models, and (3) heterogenous test methods and specimen quality substantially limit direct clinical translation and reproducibility β clinical decisions should therefore combine biomechanical insights with patient factors and clinical evidence
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