presents
Wheeless' Textbook of Orthopaedics
www.datatrace.com
Tracking Pixel
Search Site by Word
My Account

Diaphyseal fractures of the humerus. Treatment with prefabricated braces


Zagorski-JB; Latta-LL; Zych-GA; Finnieston-AR J-Bone-Joint-Surg-Am. 1988 Apr; 70(4): 607-10 Using a prefabricated brace, we treated 233 patients who had a fracture of the humeral shaft. One hundred and seventy patients were available for follow-up, which ranged from five weeks to forty-eight months. In these patients (forty-three open and 127 closed fractures), the average time to union was 10.6 weeks; the average varus-valgus angulation, 5 degrees; the average anterior-posterior angulation, 3 degrees; and the average shortening, as measured radiographically, four millimeters. All but three of the patients had an excellent or a good functional result with a nearly full range of motion of the extremity. There were a minimum of complications, including three non-unions. Because of the low morbidity and high rate of success, we concluded that the treatment of choice for diaphyseal fractures of the humerus is the prefabricated brace.



Original Text by Clifford R. Wheeless, III, MD.