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      Risk Factors of Elbow Stiffness After Open Reduction and Internal Fixation of the Terrible Triad of the Elbow Joint

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          Abstract

          Objective

          To analyze the risk factors of elbow stiffness following open reduction and internal fixation of the terrible triad of the elbow joint.

          Methods

          A retrospective study was conducted of 100 patients with the terrible triad of the elbow joint, who had been treated at our hospital from January 2015 to December 2018. All patients were treated with a loop plate to repair the ulnar coronoid process. According to the severity of the injury, the radial head was either fixed or replaced, and the lateral collateral ligament was repaired with an anchor. According to the range of motion of the elbow during the last follow‐up, the patients were divided into two groups. The stiffness group (displayed extension–flexion or pronation–supination <100°) consisted of 30 patients. The second group, named the non‐stiffness group (exhibited extension–flexion and pronation–supination ≥100°), consisted of 70 patients. Related risk factors included age, gender, smoking, diabetes, whether the fracture is on the dominant side, mechanism of injury, fracture classification, time from injury to surgery, configuration of internal fixation of the radial head, postoperative immobilization time, and use of anti‐heterotopic ossification drugs (oral indomethacin). Both t‐test and chi squared test were used to analyze any significant differences. Only the variables with a P < 0.05 in the tests were retested into a logistic multiple regression in order to screen risk factors of elbow stiffness.

          Results

          All patients were followed up for 12–48 months (average, 25.7 months), and all patients exhibited bone healing. Multivariate regression analysis showed that high‐energy injury (OR = 3.068, 95% CI 1.134–8.295, P = 0.027), time from injury to surgery > 1 week (OR = 2.714, 95% CI 1.029–7.159, P = 0.044), and postoperative immobilization time (OR = 3.237, 95% CI 1.176–8.908, P = 0.023) were independent risk factors of elbow stiffness after surgery for the terrible triad of the elbow.

          Conclusion

          High‐energy injury, the time from injury to surgery > 1 week, and postoperative joint immobilization time > 2 weeks are the independent risk factors of elbow stiffness after surgery of the terrible triad of the elbow, which should be treated carefully in clinical treatment.

          Abstract

          The patient is a 35‐year‐old female with traffic injury. The terrible triad of the right elbow, the ulnar coronal process was fixed with loop steel plate, the radial head was fixed with countersunk head nail, and the lateral ligament complex was repaired with thread rivet. Preoperative X‐ray examination of elbow joint (A, B) CT examination of (C)). X‐ray examination of elbow joint on the second day after operation (D, E).

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          Most cited references23

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          A biomechanical study of normal functional elbow motion.

          We studied thirty-three normal patients, eighteen women and fifteen men, for normal motion and the amount of elbow motion required for fifteen activities of daily living. The amounts of elbow flexion and forearm rotation (pronation and supination) were measured simultaneously by means of an electrogoniometer. Activities of dressing and hygiene require elbow positioning from about 140 degrees of flexion needed to reach the occiput to 15 degrees of flexion required to tie a shoe. Most of these activities are performed with the forearm in zero to 50 degrees of supination. Other activities of daily living (such as eating, using a telephone, or opening a door) are accomplished with arcs of motion of varying magnitudes. Most of the activities of daily living that were studied in this project can be accomplished with 100 degrees of elbow flexion (from 30 to 130 degrees) and 100 degrees of forearm rotation (50 degrees of pronation and 50 degrees of supination). These data, not previously recorded, may be used to provide an objective basis for the determination of disability impairment, to determine the optimum position for elbow splinting or arthrodesis, and to assist in the design of elbow prostheses. The motion needed to perform essential daily activities is obtainable with a successful total elbow arthroplasty.
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            • Article: not found

            Posterolateral rotatory instability of the elbow.

            Recurrent posterolateral rotatory instability of the elbow is an apparently undescribed clinical condition that is difficult to diagnose. We treated five patients, ranging in age from five to forty years, who had such a lesion and in whom the instability could be demonstrated only by what we call the posterolateral rotatory-instability test. This test involves supination of the forearm and application of a valgus moment and an axial compression force to the elbow while it is flexed from full extension. The elbow is reduced in full extension and must be subluxated as it is flexed in order to obtain a positive test result (a sudden reduction of the subluxation). Flexion of more than about 40 degrees produces a sudden palpable and visible reduction of the radiohumeral joint. The elbow does not subluxate without provocation. The cause for this condition, we think, is laxity of the ulnar part of the lateral collateral ligament, which allows a transient rotatory subluxation of the ulnohumeral joint and a secondary dislocation of the radiohumeral joint. The annular ligament remains intact, so the radio-ulnar joint does not dislocate. Operative repair of the lax ulnar part of the lateral collateral ligament eliminated the posterolateral rotatory instability, as revealed intraoperatively in our five patients.
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              Post-traumatic contracture of the elbow. Operative treatment, including distraction arthroplasty.

              B Morrey (1990)
              Twenty-six consecutive patients who had post-traumatic contracture of the elbow were treated by operative release alone or by release and distraction arthroplasty, with or without fascial interposition. The type of operative procedure was determined by whether the factors limiting motion were purely extra-articular (extrinsic) or whether they included intra-articular (intrinsic) elements as well. The mean preoperative arc of total motion was 30 degrees (from 63 to 93 degrees of flexion). At follow-up examination, twenty-two to ninety-four months post-operatively, of twenty-five patients, the mean arc of total motion was 96 degrees (from 30 to 126 degrees). There were eight complications in seven (27 per cent) of the patients. Of these, four (avulsion of the triceps tendon, deep infection, and two ulnar-nerve paresthesias) were managed by subsequent operative treatment. The other four complications included drainage from a pin site, which resolved after removal of the pin: a three by two-centimeter skin slough, which spontaneously epithelialized; aseptic resorption of the distal end of the humerus and proximal end of the ulna, which stopped after immobilization and subsequent bracing of the elbow but resulted in moderate instability; and ulnar-nerve paresthesia, which was not operatively treated and persisted. Twenty-four (96 per cent) of the twenty-five patients who were followed for twenty-two months or more were satisfied with the results of the procedure because of the improved facility in carrying out activities of daily living. No patient had increased pain, but two had moderate instability. It was concluded that the results of distraction arthroplasty can be gratifying, but the technique is demanding and the rate of complications is high.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                henglisonghhyy@163.com
                zhangkunhhyy@163.com
                Journal
                Orthop Surg
                Orthop Surg
                10.1111/(ISSN)1757-7861
                OS
                Orthopaedic Surgery
                John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd (Melbourne )
                1757-7853
                1757-7861
                22 February 2021
                April 2021
                : 13
                : 2 ( doiID: 10.1111/os.v13.2 )
                : 530-536
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hong Hui Hospital Xi'an Jiaotong University Xi'an China
                [ 2 ] Yan'an University School of Medicine Yan'an China
                [ 3 ] Xi'an Jiaotong University Xi'an China
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Address for correspondence Kun Zhang, PhD, and Lisong Heng, MD, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Honghui Hospital, Xi'an Jiaotong University, 555 Youyi East Road, Beilin District, Xi'an, Shaanxi, China 710054 Tel: 15029219698; Fax: 029‐87894724; Email: zhangkunhhyy@ 123456163.com (Zhang); Tel: 13379259833; Fax: 029‐87894724; Email: henglisonghhyy@ 123456163.com (Heng)

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2607-9266
                Article
                OS12879
                10.1111/os.12879
                7957406
                33619861
                fa3d4dc2-cbe3-4b28-bc4d-f3301ac7839f
                © 2021 The Authors. Orthopaedic Surgery published by Chinese Orthopaedic Association and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

                History
                : 11 October 2020
                : 25 August 2020
                : 26 October 2020
                Page count
                Figures: 2, Tables: 5, Pages: 7, Words: 4897
                Funding
                Funded by: Shaanxi Provincial Science and Technology Department , open-funder-registry 10.13039/501100011710;
                Award ID: 2017SF‐197
                Categories
                Clinical Article
                Clinical Articles
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                April 2021
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_JATSPMC version:5.9.9 mode:remove_FC converted:15.03.2021

                elbow stiffness,internal fixation,risk factors,the terrible triad of the elbow

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