What’s wrong with walking with hip and lower back pain after 4 months of conservative treatment for iliac fracture?

Walking buttocks and waist pain after 4 months of conservative treatment of iliac fracture may be caused by soft tissue contracture, injury and re-fracture, imbalance of strength between two sides, and distant complications of fracture.
1. Soft tissue contracture: patients with iliac fracture treated conservatively are bedridden for a long time, patients may have contracture or atrophy of muscles and other soft tissues, and patients may have buttocks and waist pain when walking.
2. Soft tissue injury or re-fracture: after 4 months of conservative treatment, if the patient suffers from trauma again, it may lead to local soft tissue injury or re-fracture, and the patient may have buttocks and waist pain when walking.
3. Uneven strength on both sides of the body: due to the uneven strength on both sides of the body after iliac fracture, patients may have buttocks and waist pain when standing and walking.
4. Non-union or deformity healing: Due to poor blood supply or incomplete reset of iliac fracture, the fracture will not be healed or deformity healing will occur after 4 months of recovery, which will lead to buttocks and waist pain when the patient walks.
5. Distant complications: such as injurious ossification, traumatic arthritis, ischemic osteonecrosis and other complications, the patient’s fracture involves the joints, causing joint inflammation, ossification, etc., which can lead to walking buttocks and back pain.
Patients with iliac fracture walking buttocks and back pain after 4 months of conservative treatment are recommended to consult the doctor in time, improve the relevant examination, and deal with it as early as possible to avoid causing adverse consequences.