Surgical treatment aims at restoring anatomical elements to a condition stable enough, to allow early mobilization to avoid secondary displacement. The blood supply of the humeral head should not be damaged, so the risk of avascular necrosis will be minimal. This work offers a new surgical technique that dramatically reduces the need for dissection of soft tissues while using a new locked plate.
The two arms of this Y shaped plate embrace the humeral head. The anterior arm overbridges the biceps longus tendon and fixes the lesser tuberosity, with a locked screw in the head. The posterior arm fixes the greater tuberosity with an another locked screw. These two screws cross each other at nearly right angle thus giving optimal fixation in the head.
The main complications were 3 algodystrophies, 1 hematoma, 4 failures of fixation, 2 nonunions and only one necrosis.
Retrograde nailing was achieved by trepanation of the apex of the olecranon fossa. Proximal or distal locking was applied in all cases using one or more screws. Outcome was assessed with the S.O.O. criteria (1996).