Compression fractures

Compression fractures

A compression fracture occurs when an injury to a spinal bone (vertebra) causes it to fracture and collapse (compress). A weakened vertebra may collapse because of a minor injury or without an obvious injury, often as the result of osteoporosis, which is most common in women after menopause.

When several vertebrae have been fractured, a person may lose height. Compression fractures may lead to a hump in the upper back (dowager's hump) and may cause back pain.

Treatment of compression fractures may include treating the osteoporosis with medications and calcium, as well as treatment of pain with analgesics or calcitonin. Surgery may be necessary if there is any loss of function because of bone pressing on the spinal cord or spinal nerves. Two surgical treatments, vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty, may be done to relieve persistent pain. In these procedures, surgical bone cement is injected into the crushed vertebrae through a needle.

Author Shannon Erstad, MBA/MPH
Editor Kathleen M. Ariss, MS
Associate Editor Pat Truman, MATC
Primary Medical Reviewer William M. Green, MD - Emergency Medicine
Specialist Medical Reviewer Robert B. Keller, MD - Orthopedics
Last Updated February 6, 2008




Author: Shannon Erstad, MBA/MPH Last Updated: February 6, 2008
Medical Review: William M. Green, MD - Emergency Medicine
Robert B. Keller, MD - Orthopedics


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