Common Fractures And Dislocations

Common fractures and dislocations are frequently encountered musculoskeletal injuries involving breaks in bone continuity or displacement of articulating surfaces from their normal joint alignment, typically resulting from trauma, falls, or repetitive stress.

Common Fractures and Dislocations

Epidemiology and Risk Factors

Anatomy and Function

Understanding anatomy is crucial because it dictates fracture pattern, neurovascular complications, and management strategy. Below is a region-by-region summary of key anatomical concepts relevant to common fractures and dislocations.

Upper Limb

Lower Limb

Etiology and Pathophysiology

Etiology — Mechanisms of Injury

Pathophysiology — What Happens When Bone Breaks?

Classification

General Fracture Classification

Specific Fracture Classifications by Region

Dislocation Classification

Clinical Features

Signs

Site-Specific Signs

Differential Diagnosis of Common Fractures and Dislocations

The differential diagnosis (DDx) of a suspected fracture or dislocation is not simply "is it broken or not?" — it is a systematic process of distinguishing the specific injury from other conditions that can mimic it. The approach varies by anatomical region, patient age, and mechanism. Below we work through this from first principles: what else could cause the same presentation?

The key principle is: pain, swelling, deformity, and loss of function around a bone or joint can be caused by fracture, dislocation, soft tissue injury, infection, crystal arthropathy, tumour, or referred pathology. Your job is to narrow this down using history (mechanism, timeline, risk factors), examination, and targeted investigations.


Region-Specific Differential Diagnosis

References

[2] Senior notes: maxim.md (Sections on shoulder dislocation, clavicle fracture, proximal humerus, elbow injuries, forearm fractures, distal radius, hand injuries, scaphoid fracture, De Quervain's, hip anatomy/trauma, #NOF, patella fracture/dislocation, tibial plateau, tibial shaft, calcaneus, talus, Lisfranc, acetabular fracture, spine DDx, pathological fractures, epicondylitis, radial head fracture) [5] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Radiology.pdf (p1, p6 — pelvic trauma, Chance fracture) [7] Lecture slides: GC 230. Knee Sport Injuries_Part 1.pdf (p62, p65) [8] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Fundamentals.pdf (p406 — Approach to Acute Monoarthritis) [9] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Rheumatology.pdf (p28 — Approach to Acute Monoarthritis) [10] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Cardiology.pdf (p208 — Acute Limb Ischaemia, arterial trauma) [11] Lecture slides: GC 231. High Energy Trauma Open Fracture_Part 3.pdf (p4 — Compartment syndrome) [12] Lecture slides: GC 226. Lumbar Spine Pathology_Part E (2).pdf (p2 — DDx of back pain)

Diagnostic Criteria, Diagnostic Algorithm, and Investigation Modalities

Clinical Decision Rules

While fractures and dislocations lack formal "diagnostic criteria," several validated clinical decision rules guide the need for imaging:

Radiographic Criteria for Specific Fractures

Once imaging is obtained, specific radiographic measurements serve as diagnostic and treatment-guiding criteria:

Investigation Modalities — Comprehensive Guide

Special Investigation Scenarios — Decision Points

References

[2] Senior notes: maxim.md (Fracture XR interpretation, distal radius fracture radiographic criteria, Frykman classification, scaphoid fracture investigations, #NOF investigation and radiological features, elbow XR lines, forearm fracture-dislocations, olecranon fracture, elbow dislocation, proximal humerus investigations, femoral shaft investigations, distal femur investigations, tibial plateau investigation, tibial shaft investigation, ankle sprain Ottawa rules, ankle fracture, calcaneal fracture investigations, talar fracture investigation, Lisfranc radiological features, ACJ dislocation XR, patella dislocation XR, cervical spine soft tissue rules, paediatric XR interpretation) [5] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Radiology.pdf (p1 — principles of trauma imaging, standard trauma series, modalities; p3 — rib fracture; p6 — pelvic fracture CT findings) [6] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Endocrine.pdf (p49 — DEXA interpretation, T-score, osteoporosis diagnosis) [7] Lecture slides: GC 230. Knee Sport Injuries_Part 1.pdf (p62 — fracture/dislocation uncommon in knee sports injuries; p64 — subtle X-ray findings) [13] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Diagnostic Radiology.pdf (p13 — plain film radiography principles, special views, spatial resolution) [14] Lecture slides: GC 110. Paraplegia Spinal cord compression Transverse myelitis Spinal dysraphism Neuroimaging III Spinal Cord.pdf (p14 — X-ray, CT, MRI of spine)

Management of Common Fractures and Dislocations

The 3R Framework — Management of Closed Fractures [2]

Specific Management by Region

References

[2] Senior notes: maxim.md (Sections on principles of trauma management, 6A framework, 3R framework, Salter-Harris management, clavicle fracture management, proximal humerus management, humeral shaft management, radial head fracture Mason classification and management, olecranon fracture management, elbow dislocation management, forearm fracture management, distal radius fracture management, scaphoid fracture management, hand injury management, #NOF management, femoral shaft fracture management, distal femur fracture management, acetabular fracture management, tibial plateau management, patella fracture management, tibial shaft fracture management, ankle fracture management, pilon fracture management, calcaneal fracture management, talar fracture management, Lisfranc management) [6] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Endocrine.pdf (p50 — osteoporosis treatment, FRAX, bisphosphonates) [15] Lecture slides: GC 231. High Energy Trauma Open Fracture_Part 1.pdf (p5 — life-threatening injury; p6 — limb-threatening injury; p9 — priorities in multiple fractures) [16] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Neurology.pdf (p177 — spinal fracture management, methylprednisolone contraindicated)

Complications of Common Fractures and Dislocations

Complications are the reason we treat fractures and dislocations aggressively. Understanding them from first principles means understanding why each complication happens — and once you understand the "why," the recognition and management become intuitive.

Complications can be classified by timing (early vs late), scope (local vs systemic), and specificity (general complications of any fracture vs site-specific complications).


Early Local Complications

Early Systemic Complications

Late Local Complications

References

[2] Senior notes: maxim.md (Sections on complications of trauma — classification, early/late, local/systemic; compartment syndrome; Volkmann's contracture; fracture healing complications; fracture blisters; heterotopic ossification; crush syndrome; supracondylar fracture complications; radial head fracture complications; elbow dislocation complications; forearm fracture complications; distal radius complications; scaphoid complications; mallet finger complications; shoulder dislocation complications; #NOF management and complications; femoral shaft complications; hip dislocation complications; tibial plateau complications; patella fracture complications; tibial shaft complications; calcaneal complications; talar fracture complications; post-arthroplasty complications) [3] Lecture slides: GC 232. Paediatric Musculoskeletal Injury [Updated in 2025].pdf (p25 — Salter-Harris classification prognosis; p58 — AIN injury in supracondylar fractures; p61 — cubitus varus as most common complication) [5] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Radiology.pdf (p6 — pelvic fracture associated injuries) [10] Senior notes: Ryan Ho Cardiology.pdf (p208, p212 — arterial trauma from fractures/dislocations, compartment syndrome mechanism and management, rhabdomyolysis) [15] Lecture slides: GC 231. High Energy Trauma Open Fracture_Part 3.pdf (p13 — infection as most likely serious complication of open fracture) [17] Senior notes: felixlai.md (Sections on compartment syndrome pathophysiology, rhabdomyolysis, reperfusion injury, anterior compartment most commonly affected)

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