| Literature DB >> 35650611 |
Kaarlo V Kervinen1, Mikko T Salmela2, Tuomas A Lähdeoja3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Modern treatment options of distal humerus fractures of active elderly patients are osteosynthesis and total elbow arthroplasty. The evidence of outcomes of ORIF after AO/OTA C-type fractures mostly predates the adoption of locking plates. We evaluated the results of open reduction and internal fixation of these fractures treated exclusively with anatomic locking plates.Entities:
Keywords: Distal humerus fracture; Elderly; Locking plate; Osteosynthesis; Oxford Elbow Score; Surgical treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35650611 PMCID: PMC9158207 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-022-05431-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.562
Fig. 1The study flowchart
Patient and treatment characteristics by follow-up status
| 39 (100%) | 23 (59%b) | 14 (36%b) | 16 (41%b) | |
| 75.9 (65.3–90.2) | 75.0 (65.3–86.4) | 74.2 (65.3–82.8) | 77.2 (65.5–90.2) | |
| 30 (77%) | 20 (87%) | 13 (93%) | 10 (63%) | |
| C1 | 22 (56%) | 15 (65%) | 8 (57%) | 7 (44%) |
| C2 | 4 (10%) | 4 (17%) | 2 (14%) | 0 |
| C3 | 13 (33%) | 4 (17%) | 4 (29%) | 9 (56%) |
| | 10 (26%) | 3 (13%) | 1 (7%) | 7 (44%) |
| Simple fall | 31 (79%) | 20 (87%) | 12 (86%) | 11 (69%) |
| Fall (< 3 m) | 3 (8%) | 1 (4%) | 0 | 2 (13%) |
| Fall while cycling | 4 (10%) | 2 (9%) | 2 (14%) | 2 (13%) |
| Other | 1 (3%) | 0 | 0 | 1 (6%) |
amean (range). Years
bof total N
Outcomes
| OES pain | score | 83 (17; 44–100) | ||
| OES function | " | 83 (17; 44–100) | ||
| OES social-psychological | " | 79 (20; 31–100) | ||
| OES Total | " | 81 (15; 46–100) | ||
| Active arc of motion | degrees | 119 (19; 75–145) | 146 (8; 135–160) | < 0.0001 |
| Extension deficit (active) | " | 22 (14; 5–60) | 1 (6; -5–15) | < 0.0001 |
| Maximum flexion (active) | " | 141 (6; 130–150) | 148 (5; 140–155) | 0.003 |
| Active forearm pro-supination arc | " | 177 (14; 150–200) | 175 (17; 140–200) | 0.7 |
| Forearm pronation (active) | " | 91 (19; 70–100) | 90 (12; 60–110) | 0.9 |
| Forearm supination (active) | " | 86 (12; 60–100) | 85 (16; 50–100) | 0.9 |
| MEPS | points | 85 (17; 50–100) | 100 (1; 95–100) | 0.003 |
| MEPS categories: excellent ≥ 90 / good 87–89 / fair 60–74 / poor < 60 | number per category | 6 / 4 / 3 / 1 | 14 / 0 / 0 / 0 | |
| qDASH | points | 19 (16; 2–43) | ||
| Subjective satisfaction | NRS 0–10 | 9 (1; 7–10) | ||
Data given as mean (SD; range) or numbers
‡p comparing injured to the uninjured side
Fig. 2Radiographs of patients with typical fractures resulting in. A a good result (OES 94, flexion–extension arc 125 degrees, MEPS 100, qDASH 10) and B stiff elbow with moderate outcome (OES63, flexion–extension arc 75 degeres, MEPS 60, aDASH 38). 1: postinjury radiograph. 2: postinjury CT 3D reconstruction. 3: postoperative radiograph. 4: radiograph at follow-up (A: 1,8 years, B: 2,5 years)
Numbers of surgeries and reasons for revision surgeries. Outcomes are shown for patients who required non-implant removal revision surgeries related to the fracture treatment
| Number of surgeries | Number of patients | Reason for revision surgeries and description of treatment |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 28 | Primary operation only, no complications |
| 2 | 5 | Implant irritation: Late removal of tension band |
| 1 | Implant irritation: Late removal of tension band and plates | |
| 1 | Non-union of olecranon osteotomy: Reosteosynthesis (good result: OES pain 94, function 100, S-P 100, Total 98) | |
| 1 | ORIF failure by 6 weeks: TEA (with modest result: OES pain 56, function 75, S-P 50, Total 60) | |
| 3 | 1 | Technical difficulties in first surgery: A revision of failed ORIF, TEA at nine months from the injury (with a good result: OES pain 100, function 100, S-P 75, Total 92) |
| 1 | Postoperative wound dehiscence: Wound revision and removal of olecranon plate five months from injury (wound healed, no outcome data, patient died during the follow-up period) | |
| 10 | 1 | Deep infection with osteomyelitis: Removal of implants, multiple revisions, resection of osteomyelitic bone and eventually the joint. Led to an almost painless, but poorly functioning elbow (OES pain 81, function 44, S-P 31, Total 52) |
Outcomes in studies of similar patients
| Article name (year) | Number of patients | Number at follow-up | Patient age years | F-U years | Fracture AO types | Only locking plates? | MEPS | DASH | Flex-ext arc | Sup-pron arc | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| -b | 292 | 75c | 3.6 | B and C | No | 88 | 35f | 100 | -b | Multiple | |
| 63 | 41 | 66c | 3.2 (2.2–6.8) | C | No | 85 | 21 g | 105 | 156 | India | |
| 21 | 16 | 78 (70–84)d | 4 (1–8) | C | Yes | 91 | 19 | 97 | 147 | United States | |
| 39 | 23 (14 + 9) | 79 (69–93)d | 3.2 (1–6.2) | C | Yes | 85 | 19 | 119 | 177 | Finland | |
| | 40 | 21 | 79 (SD9)e | 5 (2–13) | -b | 90 | 31 | 111 | 152 | Canada | |
| | 29 | 20 | 75 (38–93, SD12)c | > 10 | -b | 91 | -b | 94 | 152 | United States | |
| | -b | 271 | 74 | 3.8 | B and C | 90 | 39f | 101 | -b | Multiple | |
Data presented as numbers, means, means (range) and means (SD)
F-U Ffollow-up, Flex-Ext Flexion–extension (arc was calculated by subtracting the mean extension loss from mean flexion if direct data was not available), Sup-pron Supination-pronation (arc was calculated by adding pronation and supination if direct data was not available)
adata from non-rheumatoid patients
bdata not available
cunspecified
dat follow-up
eat index surgery
fdata from 3 studies of 10 included in the review for ORIF, 5 studies of 13 for TEA
gDASH is reported arm-specifically, the value of the injured arms was tabulated