| Literature DB >> 35232415 |
Jan-Peter Grunz1, Jonas Schmalzl2, Henner Huflage1, Tabea Fieber3, Christian Färber3, Jonas Knarr1, Simon Veldhoen1, Martin C Jordan3, Fabian Gilbert4, Thorsten Alexander Bley1, Rainer H Meffert3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Morphology and glenoid involvement determine the necessity of surgical management in scapula fractures. While being present in only a small share of patients with shoulder trauma, numerous classification systems have been in use over the years for categorization of scapula fractures. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the established AO/OTA classification in comparison to the classification system of Euler and Rüedi (ER) with regard to interobserver reliability and confidence in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Classification; Confidence; Fracture; Glenoid; Reliability; Scapula
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35232415 PMCID: PMC8886840 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-022-05146-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Flow chart for visualization of study structure and patient population
Euler and Rüedi scapula fracture classification
| A | B | C | D | E |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isolated or multifragmentary | B1 Spine fracture | C1 Anatomical neck fracture | D1 Glenoid rim fracture | Concomitant humeral head fractures |
D2 Glenoid fossa with a) Inferior glenoid fragment b) Horizontal split fracture c) Coracoglenoid block formation d) Comminuted fractures | ||||
B2 Coracoid fracture | C2 Surgical neck fracture | |||
B3 Acromion fracture | C3 Surgical neck fracture with a)Clavicle fracture b)Ligament tear | |||
D3 Scapula neck and body |
AO/OTA scapula fracture classification
| A | B | F |
|---|---|---|
A1 Coracoid fracture | B1 Fracture exits the body at ≤ 2 points | F0 Fracture through the extra-articular subchondral bone of the glenoid fossa |
F1.1 Simple, anterior rim fracture | ||
A2 Acromion fracture | F1.2 Posterior rim fracture | |
B2 Fracture exits the body at ≥ 3 points | F1.3 Transverse or short oblique fracture | |
A3 Spine fracture | F2.1 Multifragmentary (≥ 3 articular fragments), glenoid fossa fracture | |
F2.2 Multifragmentary (≥ 3 articular fragments with rim exits) fracture with central dislocation |
Fig. 2Cinematic volume rendering technique demonstrates complex scapula fractures with intra- und extra-articular injury patterns
Diagnostic confidence
| Diagnostic confidence | Intra-articular fracture ratings | Extra-articular fracture ratings | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AO/OTA | ER | AO/OTA | ER | |
| 85 (54,49%) | 41 (26,28%) | 262 (59,55%) | 420 (95,45%) | |
| 36 (23,07%) | 64 (41,03%) | 143 (32,50%) | 14 (2,73%) | |
| 22 (14.10%) | 36 (23,08%) | 15 (3,41%) | 1 (0,23%) | |
| 8 (5.13%) | 6 (3,85%) | 3 (0,68%) | 0 (0%) | |
| 5 (3,21%) | 9 (5,77%) | 17 (3,86%) | 5 (1,14%) | |
| 5 (4 – 5) | 4 (3 – 5) | 5 (4 – 5) | 5 (5 – 5) | |
AO/OTA AO Foundation / Orthopaedic Trauma Association classification, ER Euler and Rüedi classification, IQR interquartile range (25% – 75%)
Not classifiable fractures
| Fractures deemed not classifiable | Intra-articular fracture ratings | Extra-articular fracture ratings |
|---|---|---|
| AO/OTA | 0 (0%) | 17 (3.86%) |
| ER | 5 (3.21%) | 4 (0.91%) |
AO/OTA AO Foundation / Orthopaedic Trauma Association classification, ER Euler and Rüedi classification