4.6 Article

What Range of Motion and Functional Results Can Be Expected After Open Arthrolysis with Hinged External Fixation For Severe Posttraumatic Elbow Stiffness?

Journal

CLINICAL ORTHOPAEDICS AND RELATED RESEARCH
Volume 477, Issue 10, Pages 2319-2328

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000000726

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Orthopaedics from Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital East Affiliated to Shanghai University of Medicine & Health Sciences

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Background The elbow is more susceptible to loss of motion after trauma than any other joint. Open arthrolysis often is performed for posttraumatic elbow stiffness if the stiffness does not improve with nonsurgical treatment, but the midterm results of this procedure and factors that may limit recovery have not been widely studied. Questions/purposes We reviewed patients who had undergone open arthrolysis with hinged external fixator for severe posttraumatic elbow stiffness (ROM <= 60 degrees) with a minimum of 5 years followup to (1) analyze ROM gains; (2) assess functional improvement with the Mayo Elbow Performance Index (MEPI) and DASH, quality of life with the SF-36, pain with VAS, and ulnar nerve function with the Amadio rating scale and Dellon classification; and (3) identify complications and risk factors that might hinder mid-term elbow motion recovery after this procedure. Methods Between March 2011 and December 2012, we generally offered patients with elbow stiffness an open arthrolysis procedure when function did not improve with 6 months of nonoperative therapy, and no contraindications such as immature heterotopic ossification or complete destruction of articular cartilage were present. During that time, 161 patients underwent open arthrolysis for posttraumatic elbow stiffness at our institution; 49 of them satisfied the study inclusion criteria (adults with elbow ROM <= 60 degrees as a result of trauma) and exclusion criteria (stiffness caused by burns or central nervous system injuries, causative trauma associated with nonunion or malunion of the elbow, severe articular damage that would have necessitated joint arthroplasty, or prior elbow release). In general, a combined medial-lateral approach to the elbow was performed to address the soft tissue tethers and any blocks to elbow motion, and a hinged external fixator was applied for 6 weeks to maintain elbow stability and improve the efficacy of postoperative rehabilitation. These patients were evaluated retrospectively at a mean followup period of 69 months (range, 62-83 months), and demographics, disease characteristics, arthrolysis details, pre- and postoutcome measures as noted, and complications were recorded via an electronic database. Multivariate regression analysis was performed to identify factors associated with ROM recovery. Results At final followup, total ROM increased from a preoperative mean of 27 +/- 20 degrees to a postoperative mean of 131 +/- 11 degrees (mean difference, 104 degrees; 95% CI, 98 degrees-111; p < 0.001), and 98% (48 of 49) of patients achieved a functional ROM of 30 degrees to 130 degrees. Improvements were also found in functional scores (MEPI: 54 +/- 12 to 95 +/- 7, mean difference, 41 points; DASH: 48 +/- 17 to 8 +/- 8, mean difference, 40 points; both p < 0.001), life quality (physical SF-36: 46 +/- 11 to 81 +/- 12, mean difference, 35 points; mental SF-36: 43 +/- 14 to 80 +/- 9, mean difference, 37 points; both p < .001), pain (VAS: 2.5 +/- 2.4 to 0.4 +/- 0.8; mean difference, 2.0 points; p < 0.001), and ulnar nerve function (Amadio score: 7.8 +/- 1.9 to 8.4 +/- 0.8; mean difference, 0.6 points; p = 0.004). A total of 18% (nine of 49 patients) developed complications, including newonset or exacerbated nerve symptoms (four patients), recurrent heterotopic ossification (two patients), and pinrelated infections (three patients). No patients underwent subsequent surgery for any of the above complications. Lastly, the medium-term ROM was divided into ROM <= 120 degrees (n = 9) and ROM > 120 degrees (n = 40). After controlling for potential confounding variables such as duration of stiffness and tobacco use, we found that tobacco use was the only independent risk factor examined (odds ratio, 9; 95% CI, 2-47; p = 0.009) associated with recovery of ROM. Conclusions Satisfactory medium-term results were found for open arthrolysis with hinged external fixation with our protocol in patients who had severe posttraumatic elbow stiffness. Appropriate and sufficient releases of tethered soft tissues and correction of any blocks that affect elbow motion intraoperatively, a dedicated team approach, and an aggressive and systematic postoperative rehabilitation program are the core steps for this procedure. Additionally, the importance of preoperative discontinuation of tobacco use should be emphasized.

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