• Title/Summary/Keyword: Monteggia's fracture

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Surgical Treatment of Neglected Adult Monteggia Fracture - 2 Cases Report - (성인의 만성 Monteggia 골절의 수술적 치료 - 2예 보고 -)

  • Shon, Hyun-Chul;Kim, Weon-Yoo;Park, Sang-Eun;Kim, Young-Yul;Yoon, Jong-Seoung;Ji, Jong-Hun
    • Clinics in Shoulder and Elbow
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    • v.9 no.2
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    • pp.235-241
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    • 2006
  • Neglected adult Monteggia fracture could induce the pain, instability and malformation of elbow. Especially, compared with the chronic Monteggia fracture of child, that of adult is difficult to treat and could concur with valgus instability and deformity, limitation of range of motion and tardy ulnar nerve palsy. But recently, the chronic Monteggia fracture of adult could be treated by the 3.5 mm compression plate (DCP) or 3.5 mm pelvic reconstruction plate, so that the result improved more and more. The treatment of choice of the chronic Monteggia fracture of adult is the corrective osteotomy and reduction of radial head or resection of radial head. We experienced two patients who had neglected Monteggia fracture over 1 year 6 months and 25 years respectively and we want to report the result of surgical treatment of chronic Monteggia fracture of adult.

Complex open elbow fracture-dislocation with severe proximal ulna bone loss: a case report of massive osteochondral allograft surgical treatment

  • Concina, Chiara;Crucil, Marina;Theodorakis, Emmanouil;Saggin, Giorgio;Perin, Silvia;Gherlinzoni, Franco
    • Clinics in Shoulder and Elbow
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    • v.24 no.3
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    • pp.183-188
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    • 2021
  • We report a case of a 69-year-old right-dominant man who had an open Monteggia-like lesion of the right elbow (Gustilo-Andersen IIIA) with severe proximal ulna bone loss associated with an ipsilateral ulnar shaft fracture due to a motorcycle accident. The patient underwent two-stage surgery. Wound debridement and bridging external fixation were performed at first. Three months later, a frozen massive osteochondral ulnar allograft was implanted and fixed with a locking compression plate. A superficial wound infection appeared 5 weeks after the second surgery. Superficial wound debridement, negative pressure therapy, and antibiotics were administered for 3 months, achieving infection healing. At 3 years post-surgery, the elbow range of motion was satisfactory with a Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) score of 16.7. Radiographs and computed tomography scans showed good allograft-bone integration without allograft reabsorption or hardware loosening. Although not complication-free, massive ulna osteochondral allograft implantation can be considered a valid option in cases of open Monteggia-like lesions associated with ulnar shaft fracture and severe bone loss in active patients, whenever osteosynthesis or joint replacement is not a proper solution. This type of bone stock restoration allows for future surgery, if needed.

Anterior Dislocation of the Radial Head Combined with Plastic Deformity of the Ulnar Shaft in an Adult: A Case Report

  • Moon, Sang Won;Kim, Youngbok;Kim, Young-Chang;Kim, Ji-Wan;Yoon, Taiyeon;Kim, Seung-Chul
    • Clinics in Shoulder and Elbow
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.42-47
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    • 2018
  • A 25-year-old woman presented to the emergency room with a painful and swollen right forearm. She had just sustained an injury from an accident during which her arm was tightly wound by a rope as she was lowering a net from a fishing boat. Before being released, her arm was rigidly trapped in the rope for approximately ten minutes. Radiographs revealed anterior dislocation of the radial head that was accompanied by plastic deformation of the proximal ulna, manifested as a reversal of the proximal dorsal angulation of the ulna (PUDA); suggested a Monteggia equivalent fracture. With the patient under general anesthesia, we reduced the radial head by posterior compression at $90^{\circ}$ of elbow flexion and at neutral rotation of the forearm. However, the reduction was easily lost and the elbow re-dislocated with even slight supination or extension of the arm. After the osteotomy of the ulnar deformity to restore the PUDA to normal, the reduction remained stable even with manipulation of the arm. We found that the patient could exercise a full range of motion without pain at the 3-month follow-up, and neither residual instability nor degenerative changes were observed at the final 3-year follow-up.