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  4. Predrilled locking compression plate is more accurate than tension band wiring in restoring articular geometry of the ulnar greater sigmoid notch after olecranon Chevron osteotomy
 
research article

Predrilled locking compression plate is more accurate than tension band wiring in restoring articular geometry of the ulnar greater sigmoid notch after olecranon Chevron osteotomy

Goetti, Patrick
•
Behrends, Dominique Andre
•
Gallusser, Nicolas
Show more
July 1, 2020
Injury-International Journal Of The Care Of The Injured

Introduction: The olecranon Chevron osteotomy (OCO) is commonly used to approach complex intraarticular fractures of the distal humerus. Predrilled tension band wiring (TBW) has historically been used to fix OCO. However, clinical outcomes are burdened by secondary loss of reduction and up to 21.3% non-union rates. The biomechanical stability of anatomic locking compression plate (LCP) was reported to be superior to TBW in olecranon fracture fixation. We hypothesised that this implant may also be superior to TBW in the anatomic reconstruction of the articular surfaces of the ulnar greater sigmoid notch after OCO by predrilling the holes of the angular stable plate with the threaded drill guide prior to osteotomy.

Materials and methods: Lateral standardised and calibrated radiographs of twenty synthetic ulnar bones were obtained using a custom-made holder prior to preparation by a senior orthopaedic trauma surgeon. Ten specimens were then predrilled using the threaded drill bit guide of an olecranon LCP, while the other ten samples were predrilled with two 1.6 mm Kirschner wires. A distal "V" OCO was performed using a 0.6 mm oscillating saw. After repositioning and fixation with the corresponding device, lateral radiographs were repeated. Two independent observers used the TraumaCad planning software to document the articular geometry of the ulnar greater sigmoid notch pre- and postoperatively. The diameter of the best-fitting circle (diameter), the distance between the tip of the coronoid and the olecranon processes (distance) and the maximum articular depth were measured.

Results: With the TBW technique, after OCO and fixation, all three postoperative measurements were significantly (p <= 0.001) different from preoperative measurements. The diameter and distance increased by a mean of 1.5 +/- 0.5 mm and 0.9 +/- 0.3 mm, respectively, while the depth decreased by a mean of 0.2 +/- 0.1 mm. In contrast, no significant differences between pre- and postoperative measurements were observed with the LCP technique (p >= 0.13). Inter and intra-observer measurement reliability was strong to very strong (intraclass correlation coefficients >= 0.793) for all three variables.

Conclusion: Our study reveals that the predrilled LCP technique is more accurate than the predrilled TBW in restoring the anatomic articular geometry of the ulnar greater sigmoid notch after OCO. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.injury.2020.04.052
Web of Science ID

WOS:000553873300028

Author(s)
Goetti, Patrick
Behrends, Dominique Andre
Gallusser, Nicolas
Terrier, Alexandre  
Becce, Fabio
Vauclair, Frederic
Date Issued

2020-07-01

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD

Published in
Injury-International Journal Of The Care Of The Injured
Volume

51

Issue

7

Start page

1597

End page

1602

Subjects

Critical Care Medicine

•

Emergency Medicine

•

Orthopedics

•

Surgery

•

General & Internal Medicine

•

articular geometry

•

distal humerus fracture

•

locking compression plate

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olecranon chevron osteotomy

•

tension band wiring

•

ulnar greater sigmoid notch

•

intraarticular fractures

•

stress-distribution

•

humeral fractures

•

distal

•

fixation

•

management

•

elbow

•

epidemiology

•

model

•

joint

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBO  
Available on Infoscience
August 14, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/170848
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