| Literature DB >> 35725465 |
Ning Liu1,2,3,4, Donglei Sun5, Hongyu Meng6,7,8, Bin Xu6,7,8, Yi Xu6, Haiyun Niu6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This retrospective study included an alternative treatment for types A2, A3, and B1 distal radius fractures using percutaneous fixation with a cemented K-wire frame.Entities:
Keywords: Distal radial fracture; K-wire; Pining
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35725465 PMCID: PMC9208138 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-022-05550-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.562
Fig. 1A type B1 distal radial fracture. A Posteroanterior view. B Lateral view
Fig. 2An 18-year-old male patient is treated with K-wires. A Two oblique K-wires are introduced through the radial styloid. B the third K-wire is introduced into the proximal fragment. C All K-wire ends are bent toward the fracture site. D Bone cement is mounted
Fig. 3Reduction and wire position are checked under fluoroscopy. A Anteroposterior view. B lateral view
Fig. 4A. A type B1 fracture with a smaller distal fragment and oblique fracture line. The transverse K-wire (a) prevents radioproximal redisplacment of fragment and radioproximal wire shift. The arrow shows the direction that the fragment and K-wire tend to displace. B. A type A2 fracture with a volar displaced fragment is reduced and fixed. The proximal transverse K-wire (a) and oblique K-wire (b) prevent the fragment rotated volarly. The arrow shows the direction that the fragment and K-wire tend to displace. C. A type A3 fracture with a dorsally displaced fragment is reduced and fixed. The K-wires (a and b) prevent the fragment rotated dorsally. The arrow shows the direction that the fragment and K-wire tend to displace
Fig. 5Bone healing after 4 weeks. A Anteroposterior view. B Lateral view
Fig. 6A type A2 fracture with a volar displaced fragment. A Preoperative anteroposterior view. B Lateral view. C Postoperative anteroposterior view. D Lateral view. E Oblique view. F All K-wire ends are mounted with bone cement to form a cemented frame
Fig. 7A type A3 distal radial fracture with dorsal fragments and without the dorsal support. A Posteroanterior view. B Lateral view
Fig. 8A Reduction is achieved with maneuver and Kapandji technique (* showing reduction K-wire), and the distal fragment is fixed with a K-wire. B Reduction on anteroposterior view. C Reduction on the lateral view. D More K-wires are added, and all K-wire ends are mounted with bone cement to form a cemented frame. E. Posteroanterior view. F. Lateral view
Demographic data on 78 patients
| Age (mean, range, yr) | 37 (16—64) |
|---|---|
| Sex (m:f) | 47:31 |
| Dominant hand (n) | 39 |
| Cause (n) | |
| Fall | 49 |
| Road traffic accident | 13 |
| Sports | 11 |
| Others | 5 |
| AO/OTA (n) | |
| A2 | 10 |
| A3 | 46 |
| B1 | 22 |
| Ulnar styloid fracture (n) | 32 |
| TBIO (mean, range, day) | 4 (0—13) |
| Operative time (mean, range, minutes) | 23 (18—41) |
| Number of K-wire (mean, range, n) | |
| Oblique | 2.6 (2—4) |
| Transverse | 1.3 (1—2) |
| Pin site infection (n) | 3 |
| Time of bone healing (mean, range, week) | 4.5 (4—8) |
| Wrist pain (VAS; day 10; mean, range) | 1 (0—2) |
AO/OTA AO Foundation and Orthopaedic Trauma Association, TBIO Time between injury to operation
Reduction maintenance measured immediately after surgery vs at bone healing
| Immediately after surgery | Bone healing | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Radial height (mm) | 12.51 ± 3.22 | 12.45 ± 3.24 | 0.441 |
| Palmar tilt (°) | 11.19 ± 0.95 | 11.14 ± 0.94 | 0.069 |
| Radial inclination (°) | 18.7 ± 3.12 | 18.68 ± 3.12 | 0.159 |
| Scapholunate gap (mm) | 1.46 ± 0.16 | 1.45 ± 0.157 | 0.058 |
| Ulnar variance (mm) | 0.35 ± 0.53 | 0.364 ± 0.54 | 0.06 |
| Articular stepoff > 2 mm (n) | 0 | 1 | - |
Data are shown as mean ± standard deviation
Outcomes at the final follow-up
| Mean | Range | |
|---|---|---|
| Follow-up time (month) | 27 | 24—33 |
| Active ROM (°) | ||
| Flexion | 74 | 61—89 |
| Extension | 67 | 52—72 |
| Radial deviation | 30 | 25—38 |
| Ulnar deviation | 17 | 7—26 |
| Pronation | 80 | 67—95 |
| Supination | 85 | 74—97 |
| Grip strength (%)a | 98 | 94 -103 |
| Supination torque (%)b | ||
| 90° of supination | 92 | 83—98 |
| 45° of supination | 95 | 92—98 |
| Neutral | 94 | 81—98 |
| 45° of pronation | 94 | 87—97 |
| 80° of pronation | 96 | 90—102 |
| Wrist pain (MWS) | 0 | 0—1 |
| Numbness (VAS)c | 0 | 0—1 |
| Wrist function (VAS) | 97 | 91—100 |
| Aesthetics (VAS) | 10 | 8 -10 |
| Satisfaction (VAS) | 10 | 8—10 |
SD Standard deviation, ROM Range of motion, VAS Visual analogue scale
a15% higher at dominant sides compared to the nondominant sides discrepancy, in which percentages show involved limb compared with opposite normal side
bSupination torque based on McConkey method
cdistribution of all sensory nerves of the hand, DASH Disabilities of the arm, shoulder and hand scores, MWS Mayo Wrist Score