Scapular fracture: Difference between revisions

m (Rossdonaldson1 moved page Scapula fracture to Scapular fracture)
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**Fractures of body and glenoid are most common
**Fractures of body and glenoid are most common
*>75% are associated with other injuries (ribs, lung, shoulder girdle)
*>75% are associated with other injuries (ribs, lung, shoulder girdle)
*Association with [[thoracic aortic injury]] classically taught, but actually <1% association in clinical practice


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==

Revision as of 16:52, 16 June 2020

Background

Scapula anatomy.
Scapula anatomy.
  • Occurs via direct trauma to shoulder area or FOOSH
    • Fractures of body and glenoid are most common
  • >75% are associated with other injuries (ribs, lung, shoulder girdle)
  • Association with thoracic aortic injury classically taught, but actually <1% association in clinical practice

Clinical Features

  • Localized tenderness over scapula with ipsilateral arm held in adduction
  • Any arm movement will worsen pain

Differential Diagnosis

Thoracic Trauma

Evaluation

X-ray showing a fracture of the scapula and clavicle.
A right sided scapula fracture with rib fractures underneath seen on a 3D reconstruction of a CT scan.
  • Dedicated scapular series (AP, lateral, axillary) will identify most fractures

Management

  • Rule-out other injuries
    • Low threshold for additional CT imaging or obs
  • Sling, ice

Disposition

See Also

References