Instabilities and Osteoarthritis of the Sternoclavicular Joint

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Abstract

Injury to the sternoclavicular joint (SCG) is very rare, accounting for 3% of shoulder injuries and ≤ 1% of instabilities. Consequently, both the treatment of acute instabilities and their subsequent states (chronic instabilities/SCG arthrosis) are controversial. While treatment has so far been mostly conservative, in recent years there has been a trend towards surgical therapy. Considerable violence, such as that found in traffic accidents or contact sports, can tear the extremely stable ligaments between the medial clavicle and sternum. While anterior dislocation is easier to reduce in most cases, instability remains in up to 50% of cases. In most cases, posterior instability requires rapid reduction, particularly due to the anatomical proximity to important cardio-pulmonary structures. If this succeeds, the rate of persistent instabilities is low. For chronic instability, reconstruction/augmentation of the ligament apparatus with tendon grafts in the Figure of 8 configuration has proven to be the standard technique in recent years.

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Plath, J. E., Martetschläger, F., Moroder, P., & Sandmann, G. (2023). Instabilities and Osteoarthritis of the Sternoclavicular Joint. Zeitschrift Fur Orthopadie Und Unfallchirurgie, 162(4), 360–367. https://doi.org/10.1055/a-2109-3190

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