AI Article Synopsis

  • This study evaluates the effectiveness of the axillary surgical approach for treating Ideberg type I and II scapular glenoid fractures in 13 patients across multiple hospitals in China between December 2020 and January 2022.
  • The patient group included 8 males and 5 females, averaging 57.5 years old, with various fracture types and some patients also having shoulder dislocations or rotator cuff tears.
  • Following surgery, which averaged about 86 minutes with minimal blood loss and hospital stays around 10 days, all patients showed good recovery outcomes, including positive scores for shoulder function and pain management during the 12 to 25-month follow-up period.

Article Abstract

Rationale: To investigate the clinical efficacy of the axillary approach in the surgical treatment of Ideberg type I and II scapular glenoid fractures.

Patient Concerns And Diagnosis: Retrospective analysis of 13 cases of scapular glenoid fracture treated in the affiliated Hospital of Jining Medical College, Jiaxiang County People hospital, Zoucheng City people Hospital, Yanzhou District People Hospital, and Juancheng County people Hospital from December 2020 to January 2022. Eight males (including 1 bilateral) and 5 females, with an average age of 57.5 years (range from 33 to 75 years). According to Ideberg classification, there were 10 cases of type I a, 1 case of type I a combined with type I b, and 2 cases of type II. All patients were treated with axillary approach surgery and 7 patients with combined anterior shoulder dislocation were treated by first-stage manipulation and second-stage reoperation. Seven patients were fixed with a wire anchor, 3 patients with type I a were fixed with a "T" plate, and 5 patients were complicated with rotator cuff tear and were repaired with a wire anchor. At the last follow-up, the Constant-Murley shoulder function score, visual analog score, DASH score, and Hawkins grade were used to evaluate shoulder function, pain, and stability after treatment.

Intervention: The intervention was to treat patients with Ideberg type I and II scaphoid fractures using an axillary approach.

Outcomes: All 13 patients in this group were followed up thoroughly, and the follow-up time was 12 to 25 months, with an average of 18.6 months. The operation time was 65 to 135 minutes, with an average of 85.6 minutes. Intraoperative blood loss ranged from 20 to 120 mL, averaging 55.6 mL. The duration of hospitalization ranged from 7 to 22 days, with an average of 9.6 days. The surgical incisions of all patients were grade-A healing. Bone healing of glenoid fractures was observed 3 months after the operation.

Lessons: The axillary approach for Ideberg type I and II scapular glenoid fractures is a feasible surgical approach with complete access through the muscle gap, minimal surgical trauma, mild postoperative pain, and satisfactory clinical results.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10344506PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000034333DOI Listing

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