Introduction: acetabular fractures are difficult to treat with often an unsatisfactory results for patients. The aim of this study is to investigate about the health-related quality-of-life outcome of patients with a traumatic acetabular fracture, as recorded at least 24 months after their surgery.
Methods: a cohort of patients underwent a dedicated acetabular surgical reconstruction for a pelvic trauma between November 2011 and May 2016, were enrolled to investigate, at least two years after injury, their midterm quality of life; SF-36 and LiSat-11 were used.
Results: 35 patients were enrolled but only 28 patients were revisited, 20 males (714%) and 8 females (286%) with a mean age of 43 years (19-73). The most common cause was motor vehicle accident (655%). Lower score after trauma are reported in both tests, SF-36 and LiSat 11, for all items.
Discussion: comparing the SF-36 score in the Italian normative sample with our SF-36 score before the trauma there is no statistically significant difference (p = 0.1661) underlining how the patients before the trauma were healthy and in good health. Both scores, SF-36 and LiSat-11, before and after trauma are statistically different with respectively p = 0,0002 and p = 0,049 which proves the lower quality of life after trauma in comparison to their life before trauma.
Conclusions: Although the treatment protocols of acetabular fractures have greatly improved over the years, these continue to have disabling consequences that hardly allow to recover a good quality of life two years after the trauma.
Keywords: Acetabular fracture; LiSat-11; Quality of life; SF-36.
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