Treatment of anterior fracture-dislocations of the proximal humerus by open reduction and internal fixation

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Abstract

Over a seven-year period we treated a consecutive series of 58 patients, 20 men and 38 women with a mean age of 66 years (21 to 87) who had an acute complex anterior fracture-dislocation of the proximal humerus. Two patterns of injury are proposed for study based upon a prospective assessment of the pattern of soft-tissue and bony injury and the degree of devascularisation of the humeral head. In 23 patients, the head had retained capsular attachments and arterial back-bleeding (type-I injury), whereas in 35 patients the head was devoid of significant soft-tissue attachments with no active arterial bleeding (type-II injury). Following treatment by open reduction and internal fixation, only two of 23 patients with type-I injuries developed radiological evidence of osteonecrosis of the humeral head, compared with four of seven patients with type-II injuries. A policy of primary treatment by open reduction and internal fixation of type-I injuries is justified, whereas most elderly patients (aged 60 years or over) with type-II injuries are best treated by hemiarthroplasty. The best treatment for younger patients (aged under 60 years) who sustain type-II injuries is controversial and an individualised approach to their management is advocated. © 2006 British Editorial Society of Bone and Joint Surgery.

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APA

Robinson, C. M., Khan, L. A. K., & Akhtar, M. A. (2006). Treatment of anterior fracture-dislocations of the proximal humerus by open reduction and internal fixation. Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery - Series B, 88(4), 502–508. https://doi.org/10.1302/0301-620X.88B4.17195

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