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Radiographic recognition of the sacral alar slope for optimal placement of iliosacral screws: a cadaveric and clinical study.

Malpositioning of iliosacral screws happens more often when common variations in the morphology of the upper sacral segments are unrecognized. Radiological-anatomic correlations of sacral anatomy were studied in 10 fresh-frozen cadaveric pelvises without evidence of skeletal disease, obtained from six male and four female donors. Eighty consecutive patients with complicated pelvic fractures treated operatively by the same surgeon using percutaneously placed iliosacral screws were evaluated. Variations in the sacral alar anatomy and slope found in upper sacral segmentation anomalies are common. Surgically important and predictable abnormal morphological patterns can be easily identified using pelvic outlet and lateral sacral plain radiographs along with computed tomographic scans. On the true lateral projections, the iliac cortical density adjacent to the sacroiliac joint parallels the sacral alar slope and is almost always caudal and posterior to it; it delineates the anterior extent of the "safe zone" for iliosacral screw insertion. Thus, the lateral sacral image provides the surgeon with a better understanding of the sacral alar slope and can help prevent iliosacral screw placement errors. The lateral sacral image should always be used intraoperatively with the inlet and outlet images to guide iliosacral screw placement.

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