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X ray interpretation

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pelvis AP X-ray normal anatomy hip joints

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pelvis AP radiograph interpretation hip dislocation fracture findings

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X-Ray Interpretation

Patient: MR. INDRAJEET, 32Y Male | Date: 02/04/2026 View: Pelvis AP | Institution: Yashwant Hospital & Trauma Centre

Systematic Findings

1. Bony Pelvis
  • Iliac crests, sacrum, and ischium appear intact with no obvious fracture lines
  • Pelvic ring appears continuous — no disruption of the ring evident
  • Symphysis pubis: appears normal in width (< 5 mm)
  • Sacroiliac joints: appear bilaterally symmetrical
2. Hip Joints
  • Right hip: Femoral head appears seated within the acetabulum; joint space appears preserved
  • Left hip: Femoral head appears seated within the acetabulum; joint space appears preserved
  • No obvious superior migration of femoral heads bilaterally
  • Acetabular margins appear intact
3. Proximal Femora
  • Femoral neck, greater and lesser trochanters: no obvious fracture lines or abnormal angulation
  • Cortical margins appear intact bilaterally
  • Bony trabeculae appear grossly normal
4. Soft Tissues
  • No obvious radioopaque foreign bodies
  • Soft tissue shadows appear symmetric
5. Lumbar Spine / Sacrum
  • Lower lumbar vertebrae visible superiorly — no gross abnormality noted on this view

Impression

No acute bony fracture or dislocation identified on this AP pelvis radiograph.
The hip joints appear congruent bilaterally with preserved joint spaces and no obvious acetabular or femoral head pathology.

⚠️ Important Disclaimer: This is an AI-assisted interpretation for educational/reference purposes only. This does not replace a formal radiological report by a qualified radiologist. Given that this film is from a Trauma Centre, clinical correlation with the mechanism of injury and physical examination is essential. If there is clinical suspicion of occult fracture (e.g., acetabular fracture, stress fracture, sacral fracture), CT pelvis is the recommended next step for definitive evaluation.
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