Acetabular Fractures after RTA

Offered By

Royal College of Radiologists

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30 minutes
 
100% Online
 
No download
 
English
 
Desktop & Mobile
   
Shareable
Certificate

Course Information

Purpose
Target Audience
Course Structure
Certificate
Prerequisites 
CPD

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Most fractures of the acetabulum occur as a result of major trauma involving axial forces on the lower limb. This micro skills course from the Royal College of Radiologists describes the main classifications of acetabular fracture, some associated injuries and complications, the plain radiographic appearances and the role of computed tomography (CT).

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Do I need any prior qualifications or experience?

Our courses and programs have been designed to meet the needs of a broad range of trainees and qualified healthcare professionals. For most courses, we do not ask that you hold certain qualifications or meet certain criteria.
Some courses are aligned to specialist medical curricula so there is a certain level of medical knowledge required in these cases. On the whole, however, the courses and programs are accessible to a broad audience of learners.

Validate your learning

Each participant receives a certificate upon course completion.

What you can expect

A 30 minute eLearning course containing interactive content and activities. 

This course is ideal for

All health professionals.
Overview

Here is what you will cover in
this course 

Identify and recognise the anatomy of the bony pelvis and hip joint, including the vascular anatomy and related soft tissues as shown on plain radiographs and CT

Identify and recognise the Judet and Letournel classifications of injuries to the acetabulum, including associated fractures of the hip, dislocations and related soft tissue injuries

List the key observations system described by Brandser and Marsh

Recognise techniques required to demonstrate acetabular injury including CT technique and second and third reformatting, inlet and outlet views in addition to antero-posterior (AP) and lateral views and the role of the Judet projection

Describe the concepts of 'columns' and 'walls'

Explain the frequency and types of complications

List the late complications for example, avascular necrosis (AVN), osteoarthritis (OA) and the role of magnetic resonance (MR) scanning in their diagnosis and treatment