About Pelvic Fracture
Key Highlights
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Specialized care tailored to a child's growing bones and anatomy.Focus on restoring pelvic stability to protect internal organs like the bladder and intestines.Aims to prevent long-term issues such as leg length differences or walking abnormalities.Utilizes child-specific surgical techniques and implant sizes for optimal outcomes.Multidisciplinary approach often involving trauma teams to manage associated injuries.
Who is this surgery for?
- High-energy trauma from events like car accidents, falls from significant height, or pedestrian-vehicle collisions.
- Unstable or significantly displaced pelvic ring fractures that cannot be managed with casting alone.
- Open fractures where the bone has broken through the skin, requiring urgent surgery to clean the wound.
- Fractures involving the hip socket (acetabulum) that affect joint alignment.
- Fractures causing injury to nearby nerves, blood vessels, or organs.
- Failure of non-surgical treatment to maintain adequate bone alignment.
How to prepare
- Comprehensive evaluation including X-rays, CT scans, and possibly MRI to assess fracture pattern and severity.
- Stabilization of the child's overall condition, especially if other injuries are present (e.g., head, abdominal).
- Blood tests and a pre-anesthesia check-up to ensure fitness for surgery.
- Detailed discussion with the surgical team about the procedure, risks, benefits, and expected recovery.
- Fasting for several hours before the scheduled surgery as instructed by the anesthesiologist.
Risks & possible complications
- Infection at the surgical site or in the bone (osteomyelitis).
- Bleeding, blood clots (deep vein thrombosis), or injury to nearby nerves or blood vessels.
- Complications from anesthesia.
- Failure of bones to heal (non-union) or healing in an incorrect position (malunion).
- Leg length discrepancy or limping due to altered growth or joint stiffness.
- Chronic pain or post-traumatic arthritis in the hip or pelvic joints later in life.
- Need for additional surgeries to remove hardware or address complications.
Recovery & hospital stay
- Initial hospital stay for pain management, monitoring, and beginning gentle movement.
- Strict non-weight-bearing on the affected side for several weeks, using crutches or a walker.
- A structured physical therapy program to restore strength, flexibility, and walking pattern (gait training).
- Regular follow-up X-rays to monitor bone healing and alignment.
- Gradual return to activities and sports only upon full clearance from the orthopedic surgeon, which may take many months.
- Long-term monitoring may be needed to ensure normal pelvic growth and development.
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Typical hospital stay: 5-10 days
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Expected recovery time: 3-6 months for basic activities; 6-12 months for full return to sports
Frequently Asked Questions
If you are considering pelvic fracture in Turkey, these questions and answers can help you make a confident, informed decision.
Top-rated hospitals in Turkey with pediatric orthopedics departments and experienced surgeons are ideal for this procedure. Use MediFyr to compare facilities, reviews, and doctor profiles before you decide.
Look at the doctor’s years of experience, hospital association, patient reviews, and how often they perform pelvic fracture. MediFyr helps you compare pediatric orthopedics and book consultations online.
The overall cost depends on hospital category, surgeon’s experience, room type, implant or device used (if any), length of stay, tests, and post-operative care. Our team can help you get cost estimates from multiple hospitals before you decide.
Procedure cost in other countries
Here is an overview of how the estimated cost, hospital stay, and recovery time for pelvic fracture compare across other countries where we have data.
| Country | Estimated cost range | Typical stay | Recovery time | View details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | USD 1,632 – USD 5,438 | 5-10 days | ~ 3-6 months for basic activities; 6-12 months for full return to sports | Know More |
| Turkey | USD 12,079 – USD 40,263 | 5-10 days | ~ 3-6 months for basic activities; 6-12 months for full return to sports | Know More |
Our 8-year-old daughter fractured her elbow...
Our 8-year-old daughter fractured her elbow in a playground fall, and Dr. Prashanth Inna was absolutely phenomenal. He explained the complex procedure in simple terms, calmed our nerves, and the minimally invasive surgery went perfectly. His follow-up care was thorough, and she's now back to gymnastics without any issues!