Can you walk around with a sacrococcygeal fracture?

In general, patients can walk after a sacrococcygeal fracture. Patients with coccyx fractures are prone to pain and displacement in a sitting position. The sacrum is connected to the lumbar spine above and passes through the sacroiliac joint below to the lower extremities on both sides. Therefore, sacrum 1 is very important and should be treated absolutely the same as lumbar spine and pelvic fracture, with strict bed rest until the fracture is healed, or until the surgical repositioning and fixation is healed before being able to walk on the ground. However, for low sacrococcygeal fractures, such as fractures of sacral 3, sacral 4, sacral 5 vertebrae or coccyx fractures, strict bed rest is not required and a little movement is possible under protection. Sacrococcygeal fractures should be judged according to the severity, and most of them should be strictly bed rest, only low sacrococcygeal fractures are not very affected and can have general activities, such as eating and urinating and defecating.