Restoring ligamentous control in dissociative carpal instability is a major issue in protecting against osteoarthritis. We present clinical and radiological results for 20 patients who underwent flexor carpi radialis three-ligament tenodesis and were prospectively reviewed at a mean follow-up of 25.1 months. Three-ligament tenodesis significantly relieved pain and increased grip strength, wrist function at the expense of joint stiffness. This improvement was not seen in cases of dynamic instability. However, ligamentous loosening did result in rapid recurrence of radiological anomalies and frequent complications. This study challenges the long-term benefit of three-ligament tenodesis in both dynamic and static chronic scapholunate instability.
Vascularized proximal fibular epiphyseal transfer in children enables reconstruction of long-bone epiphyseal defect, while conserving axial growth potential. This technique was applied in two children for diaphyseal-epiphyseal reconstruction of the proximal humerus and distal radius respectively, using a graft vascularized only by the anterior tibial artery. There were no major complications during harvesting. Both cases showed transplant growth, of a mean 0.5cm/year. Joint function in the proximal humerus reconstruction was satisfactory, with functional range of motion. In the distal radius reconstruction, range of motion was almost zero; insufficient transplant growth induced radial club hand, requiring partial correction by progressive lengthening using an external fixator. In case of severe bone loss, fibular epiphyseal-diaphyseal graft vascularized only by the anterior tibial artery is a feasible attitude.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.