Stress Fractures: Commonly Affected Bones, Imaging, Clinical Features and Treatment

  • Stress Fractures are fractures that occur due to small repetitive stresses (minor traumatic incidents)
  • Repetitive stress lead to osteoclastic resorption of the bone exceeding osteoblastic formation and a zone of relative weakness develops leading to a fracture
  • Repetitive stress could be a bending force or compressive one or a combination of both

Risk factors

  • Athletes, dancers and military recruits because they build up muscle power quickly but bone strength slowly
  • People with osteoporosis or osteomalacia
  • Patients treated with drugs that affect bone remodeling (corticosteroid, methotrexate or bisphosphonate)
  • Female gender
  • Low vitamin D level

Affected bones

  • Mostly lower extremities
  • Metatarsals (esp. second metatarsal) are the most commonly affected (march fracture) then comes navicular, calcaneum, fibula, tibia, patella, femoral shaft, femoral neck and pubic rami
  • Could also affect fifth lumbar vertebra and the shaft of humerus

Clinical features

  • Healthy patient
  • History of repetitive strenuous activity
  • Patient present with insidious onset of pain, starting after exercise initially then pain during exercise then it progresses to pain even without exercise
  • Patient usually present after the fracture has healed and may complain of a lump which is the callus
  • On examination: on look the affected site is swollen or red, warm and tender , the callus maybe palpable
  • Feeling the bone is result in tenderness over the fracture site

Imaging

  • Early on the fracture is difficult to detect on plain x ray, but if re take the x ray after few weeks it would show the defect with callus formation
  • Radio scintigraphy will show increased activity at the painful spot
  • MRI shows the fracture very well even at early stage so it is confirmatory test

Treatment

  • Elastic bandage and avoidance of painful activity for 2 to 6 weeks
  • Except in femoral neck stress fracture, if confirmed with MRI , it has to be fixated with screws
  • Most patients benefit from calcium and vitamin D supplementation

Course Menu

This article is apart from Orthopedic Trauma Basic Principles Course, This course covers these topics:

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