Objectives: To evaluate use of intraoperative fluoroscopy during acetabular surgery to determine fracture reduction and accurate placement of screws.
Design: Retrospective.
Setting: Level I trauma center.
Participants: Thirty patients with thirty-two acetabular fractures.
Intervention: Patients were evaluated with fluoroscopy during surgery to assess fracture reduction and screw placement. Anterior-posterior (AP), oblique, and lateral pelvic fluoroscopic images were obtained intraoperatively. Postoperative radiographs were used to verify fluoroscopic findings; computed tomography (CT) scans were used as the control to assess intraarticular screw placement.
Main outcome measurements: Radiographic and clinical assessment of fracture reduction and screw placement.
Results: Intraoperative fluoroscopy confirmed the extra-articular position of all screws evaluated. Postoperative CT scans confirmed the extra-articular placement of all screws assessed by fluoroscopy. Quality of reduction using intraoperative fluoroscopic images had a 100 percent correlation with reduction on final radiographs. One patient, with two screws placed without fluoroscopic evaluation, had intra-articular placement requiring revision surgery.
Conclusions: Intraoperative fluoroscopy is effective in evaluating both acetabular fracture reduction and hardware placement.