Elbow surgeries Flashcards
Malgaigne (supracondylar) fractures
most common in children
occur above olecranon fossa and are characterized by dissociation of humeral diaphysis from the condyle of the dist humerus
classified based on MOI:
- EXT type-FOOSH
- FLX type- force directed against the post aspect of flx elbow (If displaced the sharp prox bone fragment often pierces the triceps and skin causing an open fracture)
surgical mgmt depends on severity
Granger (epicondylar) fractures
lateral epicondylar fractures are rare (brief splinting followed by early ROM exercise)
medial epicondylar fractures (3rd most common in children)- incarcarated fragments need ORIF.
check for ulnar neuropathy symptoms
Transcondylar humerus fracture
usually seen in older adult patients
mgmt- close reduction and splinting, percutaneous splinting, ORIF
excessive callus formation in the coronoid or olecranon fossa may result in dec ROM
Types of transcondylar humerus fractures
transcondylar- intracapsular but extraarticular fracture (common in elderly)
epicondylar fractures- extra articular
condylar fractures- both
Intercondylar fractures
most common distal humerus fractures in adults
results from forces directed against the post aspect
mgmt- individualized based on pts age, bone quality, and fracture pattern. ORIF with plates and screws is preferred tx.
Radial head fractures
type !- undisplaced, <25% of head
type II- undisplaced
type III- entire head comminuted
type IV- ebow dislocation or montegga fracture
Elbow dislocations
classified based on the position of the ulna and radius relative to the distal humerus
Posterolateral most common (11-28%)
divergent- rare (displaced opposite of each other)
Elbow dislocations w/ associated fractures
medial and lat epicondyle fractures (12-28%)
coronoid process fractures (5-10%)- grades I, II, III as size inc. type III fractures are associated with recurrent dislocation. ORIF is recommended.
radial head fractures- ORIF recommended with assoc radial head dislocations.
Elbow dislocations
loss of ROM (avg 10-15 deg loss of ext with simple locations)
loss of strength
chronic instability
post traumatic instab
neurological or vascular injury
compartment syndrome
ectopic calcification of capsule of collat lig
heterotropic ossification of collat lig or brachialis
patients with have recurrent instability problems
Triad injuries
radial head fracture, coronoid fracture, and lig instability
flx arc- 112 deg
pronation/supination- 136 deg