Coronoid Fractures - Chris Huber 14/11/2002
Usu. occur with posterior dislocation (2-10% of dislocations)
Caused by indirect transmission of force axially up forearm (AAAmis Injury '95)
Classification
by Regan and Morrey
'89
Type I
Coronoid tip
A: no assoc dislocation
Type II
< 50% coronoid height
B: associated dislocation
Type III
> 50 % coronoid height
Stabilisation role
Bony
Acts as anterior buttress
Resists posterior subluxation
Esp at >60 degrees flexion
Soft tissues
Attachments for
Anterior capsule
Brachialis
Anterior bundle of MCL
Morrey showed radial head takes most of load at 0-30 deg flexion (JBJS '88)
Theory that load transmission shifts from radius to ulna as flexion increases
Morrey also showed that as fragment size increases, stability and prognosis worsens
Even though biomechanically a type I or II gives little instability
if isolated
,
once combined with a radial head fracture, even a small coronoid frature fragment assumes a much greater significance (Ring, Jupiter JBJS April 2002)
"Terrible Triad"
Posterior dislocation
Radial head fracture
Coronoid fracture
Affects young, active patients, yet many complications and poor prognosis
Persistent instability
Non union and malunion
Proximal radioulnar synostosis
Recommendations from Jupiter, Morrey et al in
Instructional Course Lecture
on The Unstable Elbow at the American Academy 2000
In terrible triad injuries do ORIF from lateral side, retracting fractured radial head to expose coronoid.
Approach medially if there is a large medial coronoid fragment
Types I and II " if fixation needed can use 2 braided sutures over top of fragment, pulled out via drill holes in ulna, tied over bone. If capsule involved pass suture through capsule.
Type III " ORIF with buttress plate and screws, esp if medial.
If not fixable (eg comminution) consider reconstructing "buttress" with
Portion of radial head, fixed with screws
Iliac crest tricorticate graft
Prox tip of olecranon
Allograft coronoid
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