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Stress fractures of the pubic ramus. A report of twelve cases.
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1982
Year
Pubic RamusSkeletal TraumaStress FracturesPubic ArchPelvic TraumaTwelve CasesSurgeryInferior Pubic RamusTwelve Stress FracturesMedicineOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgerySpinal Fracture
Twelve stress fractures of the pubic arch were seen in eleven patients who were joggers, long-distance runners, or marathoners. In two of the fractures there were complications of healing; that is, delayed union or refracture. With two exceptions, the lesions occurred in women between the ages of nineteen and forty-eight. In all of the patients the fracture was in the inferior pubic ramus near the symphysis pubis, and caused pain in the groin, buttock, or thigh. All fractures were non-displaced and easy to overlook on the initial radiographic examination; when a fracture of the pubic arch was clinically suspected but the radiographs were normal, a radionuclide bone scan was diagnostic. After identification of the fracture, running had to be curtailed until the symptoms disappeared in order for healing to occur.