Yonsei Med J.  1999 Feb;40(1):80-83. 10.3349/ymj.1999.40.1.80.

Traumatic hemipelvectomy before body image has developed

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. sanctus@nuri.net

Abstract

Traumatic hemipelvectomy is rarely observed because very few patients have survived from the initial trauma. We describe one male child who survived from this massive trauma with a good functional outcome. The boy was 28 months old when he was accidentally struck by a truck. He had severe open trauma of the pelvis and hemorrhage of the left lower limb. Amputation of the left hemipelvis, colostomy, cystostomy and removal of the left avulsed testicle were performed. Once healing had been achieved, he was transferred to our Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and rehabilitative management was begun, including prosthetic measurement and psychologic intervention for the patient and his parents. For 13 years of long-term follow-up, his prosthesis was readjusted annually. Now he is a 16-year-old middle school student. He is functioning remarkably well with a prosthesis. The psychologic report shows that he is emotionally stable and has good scholastic performance. Although hemipelvectomy appears to be a radical procedure in children, the potential for rehabilitation in a group of children before body image has developed appears to be unexpectedly good.

Keyword

Traumatic hemipelvectomy; pediatric amputation; rehabilitation; prosthesis

MeSH Terms

Adolescence
Case Report
Child, Preschool
Hemipelvectomy*/psychology
Hemipelvectomy*/adverse effects
Human
Male
Wounds and Injuries/surgery*
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