| Literature DB >> 24671487 |
Ozkan Kose1, Mert Keskinbora, Ferhat Guler.
Abstract
Carpometacarpal dislocation (CMC) of the thumb associated with fracture of trapezium is an extremely rare injury, with only 12 cases that sustained similar injuries reported in the literature. In this article, another patient with this rare injury was reported, and all previously published cases were extensively reviewed. The presented case and all previously published cases had a longitudinally oriented trapezium fracture, which is naturally unstable and almost always associated with dislocation of the CMC joint. In contrast to previous descriptions, we believe that CMC joint dislocation and trapezium fracture are not two distinct pathologies that occur simultaneously by chance but share cause and consequence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24671487 PMCID: PMC4441640 DOI: 10.1007/s10195-014-0288-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Traumatol ISSN: 1590-9921
Previously published cases in the English literature of carpometacarpal (CMC) dislocation of the thumb associated with trapezium fracture
| References | Sex | Age (years) | Mechanism of injury | Trapezium fracture classification | Treatment | Follow-up (months) | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tolat and Jones [ | Male | 14 | Fall onto an outstretched hand (skateboard) | IIa | Closed reduction splinting 6 weeks | 2 | Excellent without instability, full ROM |
| Mody and Dias [ | Male | 24 | Motorbike accident | IIa | Open reduction and K-wire fixation; ligament reconstruction | 6 | Excellent |
| Kukreti and Harrington [ | Not reported | 26 | Sport injury (rugby tackling) | IIa | Closed reduction and K-wire fixation | 12 | Slight pain, minimal loss of CMC flexion of CMC |
| Garavaglia et al. [ | Female | 20 | Fall while holding the handle of a bucket | IIa | Open reduction and screw fixation | 12 | Excellent |
| Garneti and Tuson [ | Male | 24 | Sport injury (rugby tackling) | IV | Open reduction and internal fixation with a minifragment 2.7-mm lag compression screw | 12 | Excellent |
| Male | 18 | Sport injury (rugby) | IV | Open reduction and internal fixation with a single 2.7-mm lag screw | 9 | Excellent | |
| Afshar and Mirzatoloei [ | Male | 30 | Motorbike accident | IIa | Closed reduction and K-wire fixation | Not reported | No pain and instability, full ROM |
| Parker et al. [ | Male | 12 | Fall onto an outstretched hand (rollerblade) | IIa | Closed reduction, spanning external fixation | 36 | Excellent |
| Morizaki and Miura [ | Male | 31 | Fall onto flexed thumb | IIa | Open reduction and internal fixation using suture anchor and K-wire fixation | 12 | Excellent |
| Chamseddine et al. [ | Male | 23 | Road accident | IV | Open reduction and K-wire fixation | 9 | Excellent |
| Ramoutar et al. [ | Male | 27 | Fall onto an outstretched hand (football) | IIa | Closed reduction and K-wire fixation | 6 | Excellent |
| Mumtaz and Drabu [ | Male | 14 | Direct trauma due to hammer hit (open injury) | IV | Irrigation, debridement, and K-wire fixation | 12 | Gross impairment in opposition and abduction |
| This case | Male | 32 | Motorbike accident | IIa | Closed reduction and splinting for 6 weeks | 6 | Excellent |
ROM range of motion
Fig. 1Volar (a) and dorsal (b) appearance at presentation
Fig. 2Anteroposterior (a) and oblique (b) radiographs. White arrow trapezium fracture
Fig. 3Postreduction radiograph of the carpometacarpal (CMC) joint showing adequate reduction and a congruent joint
Fig. 4Final hand radiographs 6 months after injury
Fig. 5Classification of trapezium fractures by Walker et al. [16]. Black lines show the fracture