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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38967783

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Treatment for complex olecranon fractures with metaphyseal comminution can be challenging. To improve reduction maneuvers and augment stability, we apply a small medial and/or lateral locking compression plate (LCP) prior to placing a posterior contoured 3.5 mm-2.7 mm LCP. The aim is to describe our technique and outcomes of this "orthogonal" plating technique. MATERIAL AND METHODS: 26 patients were treated with orthogonal plating. Clinical outcome variables were available for all patients at a median of 27 months (IQR 6-54), and patient-reported outcomes (Q-DASH and MEPS) for 23 patients at 38 months (IQR 18-71). RESULTS: All fractures healed at a median of 2.0 months (IQR 1.5-3.8). The median elbow flexion was 120°, extension-deficit 15°, pronation 88°, and supination 85°. The median Q-DASH was 9 (IQR 0-22) and the median MEPS was 90 (IQR 80-100). Hardware was electively removed in seven patients. One patient had a late superficial infection that resolved with hardware removal and antibiotics, and one patient had two consecutive re-fractures after two hardware removals; and healed after the second revision surgery. CONCLUSION: Orthogonal plating with a posterior LCP and a small medial and/or lateral LCP is a safe technique that leads to excellent healing rates, and good clinical and patient-reported outcomes.

2.
J Orthop ; 32: 85-91, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35638093

ABSTRACT

Objective: Radiographic osteoarthritis of the acromioclavicular joint (ACJ OA) is a common incidental finding and an uncommon reason for people to seek care for shoulder symptoms. We reviewed the published evidence regarding the age-specific prevalence of ACJ OA to establish the base rate of pathophysiology. Methods: A total of 10 studies including 1831 shoulders met our criteria. A pooled analysis was done to obtain a proportion of subjects with ACJ OA across age categories. Results: Forty-eight percent of 953 cadaver and skeletal specimens and 70% of 210 MRI images of asymptomatic shoulders were found to have changes consistent with ACJ OA. Four studies reporting age as a continuous variable found a statistically significant association between older age and prevalence of ACJ OA. Conclusions: The observation that ACJ OA is highly prevalent as humans age establishes a very high base rate of what one can infer is well-accommodated disease. Given that a high base rate of incidental disease creates a low pre-test odds that radiological findings of disease correspond with symptoms, diagnosis of symptomatic ACJ OA is subject to substantial inaccuracy and should be made sparingly, mindful of the potential harms of a diagnosis that can lead to an ablative surgery.

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