Operative reduction and fixation of a difficult supracondylar extension fracture of the humerus.

Category Primary study
JournalJournal of pediatric orthopedics
Year 1984
We evaluated the results of the operative treatment of a difficult supracondylar fracture of the elbow. A series of 45 consecutive children, the majority presenting initially with a complete dislocation of the humerus, was reexamined. Thirty-two of the patients had undergone an early operation applying the anterior cubital approach and 13 patients had been treated by traction. The lengths of the follow-up periods were 3.1 +/- 1.5 and 8.8 +/- 2.6 years, respectively. Normal range of extension-flexion and rotation movements was preserved almost invariably by either modality of therapy, whereas the carrying angle of the elbow was reduced significantly more often in the group treated by traction. None of the patients presented with permanent nerve dysfunction, keloid formation, or myositis ossificans. The two preventable early complications, slipping of the osteosynthesis and entrapment of the ulnar nerve, were related to the fixation of the fracture. There were no early or late infectious complications. When the anterior approach was used, operative reduction and fixation of a difficult supracondylar fracture of the humerus proved to be both safe and timesaving. Anatomical results of operation were superior to those attained by traction therapy in our series.
Epistemonikos ID: 54bb3d5c378e997d92093d814f90db913512e994
First added on: Dec 29, 2020