Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byElaine Copeland Modified over 9 years ago
2
Type C: 4/5 patients treated successfully by functional bracing Campbell et al Type C: 2/3 healed successfully with nonoperative management Kumar One fracture distal to the prosthesis tip treated successfully by nonoperative Worland et al
3
Distal to the prosthesis tip = closed humerus fractures nonoperative treatment
4
fractures located at the prosthesis tip (type A and type B) ?? did NOT heal with nonoperative management. › 5 cases in a series of 7 Boyd et al › one case Bonutti et al › 4 of 5 type B fractures failed to heal, Kumar et al
5
fractures with loose prosthesis longer- stemmed implant 4 options: › press-fitting proximally and distally › cementing proximally and distally › press-fitting proximally with cement distally › cementing proximally with press-fitting distally
6
Press-fitting proximally and distally › good quality of the humeral bone › tight fit can be achieved › obliquity fracture site
8
cement proximally and distally: › bone proximally is good to fair › bone distally is good › Transverse fracture press-fitting proximally and cement distally: › bone proximally is fair to poor › bone distally is good › fracture is rotationally stable shape / can be made
9
small amount of osteolysis proximally: › cement or bone graft extensive osteolysis proximally: › bone graft is packed around the implant within the cortical shell so extensive osteolysis: › allograft prosthetic composite
11
implant is secure and the joint is reasonably mobile: › approach the fracture site alone for fracture fixation (plate with screws, pins and cerclage cables) Allograft / Posterior iliac crest autograft bone: nonunion -/+
12
Fracture: transverse or nearly transverse as rotational stability can be attained through the use of the screws, pins and cerclage plate Fracture: oblique / implant stability, acute reduction of the fracture and cerclage Fracture: oblique / implant stability, chronic allograft + autograft
13
› 3/6 healed with nonoperative › 1 failed nonoperative management › 2 treated with immediate OP Type A fractures + loose humeral component OP: long-stem bone graft(allograft in acute cases and posterior iliac crest autograft in cases with delayed healing or nonunion) fixation with a cortical strut allograft or a plate and screws/cables
14
Type B fractures + good alignment / well- fixed humeral component: nonoperative However nonoperatively high fail not progressed toward union by 3 months OP
15
Type B fracture + well-fixed humeral component: › plate / strut graft with screw fixation in the distal portion and cerclage fixation in the proximal portion + Bone graft Type B + loose humeral component cemented long-stem + posterior iliac crest bone graft
16
Type C fracture + well-fixed humeral component: trial of nonoperative › postoperative care: Within days after surgery: gently exercised with active movement passive external rotation outward to neutral and in elevation to 100° avoid stress at the fracture site continue with a passive program until healing long-stemmed implant + cemented: active-assisted motion program at 4 to 6 weeks
17
Radial nerve injury › careful dissection and exposure at the time of fracture fixation swelling of the arm, forearm, and hand › elevation, elastic support, and the gentle active-motion program acute infection failure of humeral shaft healing › 6 months, autograft/vascular bone graft
18
well-aligned Type B fractures + well-fixed humeral component: nonoperative › High fail rate in Type B fractures › 3 months humeral component fixed: open reduction and internal fixation humeral component is loose: long stem Well-reduced Type C fractures: trial of nonoperative treatment
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.