| Literature DB >> 28100234 |
Kan Ouyang1, Daping Wang2, Wei Lu1, Jianyi Xiong3, Jian Xu1, Liangquan Peng1, Haifeng Liu1, Hao Li1, Wenzhe Feng1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The ulnar coronoid process plays a central role in maintaining elbow stability. Some of its fractures were often combined with injury of bone and ligament. Arthroscopy enables perfect visualization to allow anatomical repair.Entities:
Keywords: Arthroscopy; Bone nails; Fracture fixation; Internal; Ulna fractures
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28100234 PMCID: PMC5241964 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-016-0505-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Fig. 1a–c CT scan of a 32-year-old male patient shows fracture of the ulnar coronoid process (Regan and Morrey type II)
Fig. 2a–h Exchange rod arthroscopic techniques for the reduction and fixation of fracture of the ulnar coronoid process: clean fracture surface, fracture reduction (a, b); exchange rod technique for midline approach (c, d); Kirschner wire pierced vertical to the bone (e, f); and screwed into the hollow screw (g, h)
The postoperative condition of the patients during the follow-up
| Patient no. | Postoperative X-ray | CT scans | Range of motion | Elbow stability | Blood/nerve damage | MEPS score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Good alignment | No displacement | −2° to 135° | Stable | None | A |
| 2 | Good alignment | No displacement | −4° to 135° | Stable | None | A |
| 3 | Good alignment | No displacement | 0° to 145° | Stable | None | A |
| 4 | Good alignment | No displacement | −3° to 140° | Stable | None | A |
| 5 | Good alignment | No displacement | −1° to 145° | Stable | None | A |
Fig. 3a X-ray of a 32-year-old male patient shows fracture of the ulnar coronoid process (Regan and Morrey type II). b Lateral X-ray 6 weeks after the treatment shows no displacement of the fracture
Fig. 4a–c Six weeks postoperative CT scans showed no fracture displacement
Fig. 5a–d Images of a 32-year-old male patient with fracture of the ulnar coronoid process (Regan and Morrey type II) 1 year after treatment show normal elbow pronation (a) and supination (b) and flexion (c) and extension (d)
Fig. 6Anatomy of the elbow with a median approach using the Kirschner wire. a Radial nerve. b Lateral cutaneous nerve of the forearm. c Biceps tendon. d Elbow median neurovascular bundle (brachial artery, median nerve)