| Literature DB >> 31773896 |
Carlo Biz1, Alberto Crimì1, Elisa Belluzzi1,2, Nicola Maschio1, Riccardo Baracco1, Andrea Volpin3, Pietro Ruggieri1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Several studies have been published regarding the treatment of medial ulnar collateral ligament (MUCL) injuries for professional overhead athletes. However, there is a paucity of data regarding non-professional athletes. The aim of this systematic review was to compare the rate of outcome scores and complications of conservative versus operative treatments both in non-professional athletes and in non-sport-related trauma patients with MUCL lesions.Entities:
Keywords: Elbow dislocation; Elbow instability; Ligament injury; Sport injuries
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31773896 PMCID: PMC6904592 DOI: 10.1111/os.12571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orthop Surg ISSN: 1757-7853 Impact factor: 2.071
Demographics, level of evidence, type of intervention, and outcomes of included studies
| First author (year) | Type of study | Evidence level | D&B | Patients (M/F) | Mean age years (range) | Treatment | Procedure | Trauma | Patients | Follow up (months) | Outcome Evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iordens et al. | Case series | IV | 15 | 27 (13/14) | 52 (38–59) | C | External Fixation | 19 LE 8 HE | — | 12 | DASH, MEPS |
| Kesmezacar et al. | Case series | IV | 12 | 21 (16/5) | 35 (16–59) | C | Closed Reduction/ plaster splint/ hinged brace | — | — | 34 | MEPS |
| Dines et al. | Case series | IV | 12 | 22 | 20.1 (16–24) | S | DANE TJ | — | Athletes | 36 | Conway Scale |
| Dines et al. | Case Series | IV | 9 | 15 (15/0) | 20.1 (19–30) | S | Docking technique | — | Athletes | 24 | Conway Scale |
| Erickson et al. | Case series | IV | 12 | 187 | 19.6 | S | Docking technique | — | Athletes | 60 (of 85 patients) | Conway Scale, KJOC |
| Osbahr et al. | Case series | IV | 15 | 8 | 33.4 | S | Docking technique | — | Older athletes | / | Modified Conway scale |
| Rhyou et al. | Retrospective cohort | III | 15 | 29 (15/14) | 37 (18–57) | S | Suture anchors | General Trauma | — | 32 (26 patients completed the follow up) | DASH, MEPS |
| Richard et al. | Case series | IV | 9 | 11 | — | S | Suture and drill holes (considered open repair) | — | Athletes | 16 | DASH |
| Adolfsson et al. | Case series | IV | 9 | 8 (1/7) | 54 (30–86) | C&S | Closed reduction and immobilization in a plaster splint + open surgical repair | 6 LE 2 HE | — | 24–52 | Modified MEPS |
| Chen et al. | Case series | IV | 12 | 9 (6/3) | 34 (13–52) | C&S |
Reconstruction with autografts External fixator, rehabilitation + suture anchors | 7 LE 2 HE | — | 19.6 | MEPS |
| Dines et al. | Case series | IV | 12 | 10 | 18.5 (18–21) | C&S | Rest, physical therapy + docking technique | — | Athletes | 28.9 | Conway Scale |
| Jones et al. | Case Series | IV | 9 | 55 (51/4) | 17.4 (15.9–19) | C&S | Rest, physical therapy + docking technique | — | Athletes | 24 | Conway Scale |
| Kodde et al. | Case series | IV | 13 | 20 (7/13) | 22 8(18–35) | C&S | Physical therapy + interference screw technique | — | Athletes | 55 | Conway Scale |
| Podesta et al. | Case series | IV | 14 | 34 (28/6) | 18 (14–34) | C&1/34 S | PRP injection and physical therapy + 1 patient open ligament reconstruction | — | Athletes | 18 | DASH |
| Savoie et al. | Case series | IV | 9 | 60 (47/13) | 17.2 (14.8–22) | C&S | Rehabilitation + suture anchors | — | Athletes | 59.2 |
Andrews‐ Carson score |
C, conservative treatment; C&S, failure of conservative treatment followed by surgery; DASH, Disability of Arm, Shoulder and Hand; D&B, Downs and Black score; HE, high‐energy; KJOC, Kerlan–Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic score; LE, low‐energy; Pts, patients; S, surgery treatment.
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses (PRISMA): Flow chart diagram for inclusion and exclusion of paper process. For this study, 122 articles were assessed for eligibility after screening; among these, 15 papers fulfilled the selection criteria and were included in the analysis.
Detailed description of treatment and MUCL lesion type
| First author (year) | Number of patients | Type of lesion | Type of treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iordens et al. | 27 | Complex elbow dislocation | Hinged external fixator with no open surgical repair of MUCL for 6 weeks |
| Kesmezacar et al. | 21 | Simple elbow dislocation | Closed reduction, plaster splint (4 pts), for 3 weeks, or hinged brace (17 pts); after 1 week active and passive motions started, mean brace use was 27 days (all patients with elbow posterior dislocation) |
| Dines et al. | 22 | MUCL insufficiency | DANE TJ technique |
| Dines et al. | 15 | MUCL re‐tear | Docking technique |
| Erickson et al. | 187 | MUCL rupture |
‐ MUCL reconstruction docking technique (110 pts), double‐docking technique (78 pts). ‐ Ipsilateral palmaris longus graft (110 pts) and hamstring autograft (48 pts). ‐ 79 patients needed ulnar nerve transposition (preoperative neurologic symptoms) |
| Osbahr et al. | 8 | MUCL insufficiency and flexor‐pronator injury | MUCL reconstruction with docking technique; the flexor‐pronator injury was treated with debridement if tendinotic or reattachment if torn. |
| Rhyou et al. | 29 | MUCL insufficiency (21 pts had complete UCL rupture, 8 partial) in patients with displaced radial head and neck fractures; 11 pts also had coronoid fractures. | MUCL repaired and reattached to the original attachment site through a medial approach using a suture anchor |
| Richard et al. | 11 | Acute rupture MUCL | MUCL repair with suture + reattachment to bone with drill holes |
| Adolfsson et al. | 8 | Simple elbow dislocation | Closed reduction and immobilization in a plaster splint, followed by open surgical repair |
| Chen et al. | 9 | MUCL complete rupture | Open reduction–internal fixation with or without cast immobilization in 5 patients, manual reduction and cast immobilization in 3, and Chinese medical adhesive plaster in 1. Moreover, reconstruction with flexor‐pronator fascia patch was attempted with external fixator (after a trial of rehabilitation) |
| Dines et al. | 10 | MUCL insufficiency | Failed a course of nonoperative management that included rest, physical therapy, and a structured rehabilitation regimen + MUCL reconstruction with docking technique |
| Jones et al. | 55 | MUCL tears | Rest, non‐steroidal anti‐inflammatory medications, and a structured rehabilitation program + MUCL reconstruction with docking technique |
| Kodde et al. | 20 | MUCL insufficiency | 3 months of physical therapy + open MUCL reconstruction with interference screw technique |
| Podesta et al. | 34 | Partial MUCL lesions |
Single PRP injection at the MUCL under ultrasound guidance and physical therapy ‐ Open ligament reconstruction in 1 patient (31 weeks after PRP injection) |
| Savoie et al. | 60 | MUCL insufficiency | Rest, rehabilitation, bracing, and medication with (10 patients) or without (50 patients) intra‐articular steroid injections + MUCL suture plication with repair to bone with drill holes (9 patients) MUCL suture repair to bone using anchors (51 patients) |
MUCL, medial ulnar collateral ligament; PRP, platelet‐rich plasma; pts, patients.
Figure 2Algorithm of medial ulnar collateral ligament (MUCL) injury treatment. According to our findings, at first both patient groups (low‐function‐demand and high‐function‐demand) should be treated conservatively. Whether residual elbow instability persists, surgery is indicated for both groups, regardless of the MUCL injury type (sport‐related or non‐sport‐related).