Open reduction and plate fixation (ORPF) for displaced proximal humerus fractures can achieve reliably good long-term outcomes. However, a minority of patients have persistent pain and stiffness after surgery and may benefit from open arthrolysis, subacromial decompression, and removal of metalwork (ADROM). The long-term results of ADROM remain unknown; we aimed to assess outcomes of patients undergoing this procedure for stiffness following ORPF, and assess predictors of poor outcome. Between 1998 and 2018, 424 consecutive patients were treated with primary ORPF for proximal humerus fracture. ADROM was offered to symptomatic patients with a healed fracture at six months postoperatively. Patients were followed up retrospectively with demographic data, fracture characteristics, and complications recorded. Active range of motion (aROM), Oxford Shoulder Score (OSS), and EuroQol five-dimension three-level questionnaire (EQ-5D-3L) were recorded preoperatively and postoperatively.Aims
Methods
Antegrade nailing of proximal humeral fractures
using a straight nail can damage the bony insertion of the supraspinatus
tendon and may lead to varus failure of the construct. In order
to establish the ideal anatomical landmarks for insertion of the
nail and their clinical relevance we analysed CT scans of bilateral
proximal humeri in 200 patients (mean age 45.1 years (. sd. 19.6;
18 to 97) without humeral fractures. The entry point of the nail
was defined by the point of intersection of the anteroposterior
and lateral vertical axes with the cortex of the humeral head. The
critical point was defined as the intersection of the sagittal axis
with the medial limit of the insertion of the
We present our experience of managing patients
with iatropathic brachial plexus injury after delayed fixation of
a fracture of the clavicle. It is a retrospective cohort study of
patients treated at our peripheral nerve injury unit and a single
illustrative case report. We identified 21 patients in whom a brachial
plexus injury occurred as a direct consequence of fixation of a
fracture of the clavicle between September 2000 and September 2011. The predominant injury involved the C5/C6 nerves, upper trunk,
lateral cord and the suprascapular nerve. In all patients, the injured
nerve was found to be tethered to the under surface of the clavicle
by scar tissue at the site of the fracture and was usually associated
with pathognomonic neuropathic pain and paralysis. Delayed fixation of a fracture of the clavicle, especially between
two and four weeks after injury, can result in iatropathic brachial
plexus injury. The risk can be reduced by thorough release of the
tissues from the inferior surface of the clavicle before mobilisation
of the fracture fragments. If features of nerve damage appear post-operatively
urgent specialist referral is recommended. Cite this article:
We treated 47 patients with a mean age of 57 years (22 to 88) who had a proximal humeral fracture in which there was a severe varus deformity, using a standard operative protocol of anatomical reduction, fixation with a locking plate and supplementation by structural allografts in unstable fractures. The functional and radiological outcomes were reviewed. At two years after operation the median Constant score was 86 points and the median Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand score 17 points. Seven of the patients underwent further surgery, two for failure of fixation, three for dysfunction of the rotator cuff, and two for shoulder stiffness. The two cases of failure of fixation were attributable to violation of the operative protocol. In the 46 patients who retained their humeral head, all the fractures healed within the first year, with no sign of collapse or narrowing of the joint space. Longer follow-up will be required to confirm whether these initially satisfactory results are maintained.
We used an inverted shoulder arthroplasty in 43 consecutive patients with a mean age of 78 years (65 to 97) who had sustained a three- or four-part fracture of the upper humerus. All except two were reviewed with a mean follow-up of 22 months (6 to 58). The clinical outcome was satisfactory with a mean active anterior elevation of 97° (35° to 160°) and a mean active external rotation in abduction of 30° (0° to 80°). The mean Constant and the mean modified Constant scores were respectively 44 (16 to 69) and 66% (25% to 97%). Complications included three patients with reflex sympathetic dystrophy, five with neurological complications, most of which resolved, and one with an anterior dislocation. Radiography showed peri-prosthetic calcification in 36 patients (90%), displacement of the tuberosities in 19 (53%) and a scapular notch in ten (25%). Compared with conventional hemiarthroplasty, satisfactory mobility was obtained despite frequent migration of the tuberosities. However, long-term results are required before reverse shoulder arthroplasty can be recommended as a routine procedure in complex fractures of the upper humerus in the elderly.