| Literature DB >> 34338888 |
Matthias Königshausen1, Simon Pätzholz2, Marlon Coulibaly3, Volkmar Nicolas2, Marc Vandemeulebroecke4, Thomas Armin Schildhauer3, Dominik Seybold3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: There is little data available on non-operative treatment of anterior glenoid rim fractures (GRF). Nothing is known about fracture size and displacement in comparison to clinical outcomes and instability in a mainly middle-aged patient population. The aim of this study was to demonstrate the results of non-operative treatment in anterior glenoid rim fractures with the special focus on potential instability/recurrence.Entities:
Keywords: Bony bankart lesion; Glenoid fracture; Glenoid rim fracture; Instability; Shoulder dislocation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34338888 PMCID: PMC9474463 DOI: 10.1007/s00402-021-04020-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Orthop Trauma Surg ISSN: 0936-8051 Impact factor: 2.928
Fig. 1Concentrically reduced humeral head in the A.P.-radiograph is the main prerequisite for nonoperative treatment of GRF and represents the main criterion within radiographic controls (b CT en face view; a A.P.)
Fig. 2Flowchart of the non-operatively treated patients and inclusion in the study
Fig. 3This segment A of the circle is the sum of a triangle B and the fracture C (A = B + C, see Figure). The area of C can be obtained by subtracting B from A, both of which are derived by elementary trigonometric theory. Finally, C is expressed as a percentage of the total circle size (see Formula and Figure). Calculation: Formula 1 calculates the radian α (r) based on angle α in degrees (°). With Formula 2, the percentage of glenoid surface fracture involvement (area C, Figure) can be calculated using α (r) (from Formula 1) and the sinus of the measured angle. An exemplary calculation of the GRF in Figure is presented below with a measured angle of 109° resulting in 15% glenoid fracture involvement (formula derived and recalculated from Wambacher et al. [37])
Fig. 4Non-operative treatment of an anterior GRF (a 3D-CT, enface view) in a 56-year-old patient after shoulder dislocation with a concentrically reduced humeral head (b A.P.-radiograph) without redislocation or signs of instability across the remaining course of 6 years and a healed fragment (c, d A.P. and axial-radiograph)
Demographics and range of motion of patients after non-operatively treated anterior GRF (mean values, ranges, standard deviation and statistical difference)
| Patient age (years) | Trauma: 58 ± 13 (33–86) | Follow-up: 62 ± 13 (35–87) | |
| Sex | Female: | Male: | |
| Side affected | Right: | Left: | |
| Non-/Dominant side affected | Dominant side: | Non-dominant side: | |
| a.-/g.-CMS | 93 points (± 11 points, 61–100 points) | ||
| WOSI | 81% (± 22%, 35–100%) | ||
| Range of motion | Affected side | Contralateral side | Statistical Difference |
| Flexion | 169° ± 20 (120–180°) | 175° ± 13 (120–180°) | |
| Abduction | 163° ± 26 (90–180°) | 173° ± 15 (110–180°) | |
| External rotation (0–10 points within Constant score: external rotation with the hand back of the head including elbow position) | 9 ± 1 points (6–10) | 9 ± 1 points (8–10) | |
| Internal rotation (0–10 points within Constant score: position of the hand on the back) | 9 ± 2 points (6–10) | 9 ± 0.5 points (8–10) |
Pathomorphology and fracture characteristics in n = 36 patients after non-operatively treated anterior GRF (mean values, ranges, standard deviation and statistical difference)
| Averaged size of glenoid fracture | 21% (± 11%; 10–52%) | |
| Averaged medial displacement of the (major) fragment (coronary plane) | 4 mm (± 3 mm; 0–14 mm) | |
| Averaged displacement of the (major) fragment in the glenoid plane (sagittal) | 3 mm (± 2 mm; 0–8 mm) | |
| Mean fragment length | 24 mm (± 4 mm; 17–36 mm) | |
| Mean fragment width | 9 mm (± 3 mm, 5–14 mm) | |
| Number of fragments | 1 fragment: | |
| 2 fragments: | ||
| comminuted: | ||
| Hill-Sachs-lesion | Yes: | No: |
| Major tuberosity fracture | Yes: | No: |
| Position of humeral head at initial radiographs after trauma | ||
| Locked humeral head at anterior glenoid | ||
| Non-dislocated or already spontaneously reduced | ||
| Subluxation | ||
Differentiated correlation between displacement/ fractures sizes and clinical results of the patients (mean values, ranges, standard deviation and statistical difference)
| Non-displaced/ slightly displaced fragments (0–3 mm, mean 1.6 mm) | Widely displaced fragments (4–14 mm, mean 5.8 mm) | Statistical difference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients ( | |||
| Mean age | 58 years | 67 years | |
| a.-/g.-CMS | 92 points ± 11 | 94 points ± 12 | |
| WOSI | 79% ± 20 | 81% ± 25 |
Fig. 548-year-old patient with a minimally displaced non-operatively treated GRF (a 3D-CT, enface view) presented moderate OA (b A.P.-radiograph) 4 years later without reinstability and a free ROM (b, c A.P. and axial-radiograph)