Elbow Fracture
Four Questions
- Are the fat pads normal?
- A visible ant. fat pad is normal but if displaced anteriorly (Sail sign) it is abnormal
- A visible post. fat pad is always abnormal
- What if have fat pad displacement but no fx or displacement is identified?
- Adults: Treat as radial head fx
- Peds: Be certain that neither an undisplaced supracondylar fx nor a displaced internal epicondyle fx is overlooked!
- Is the radiocapitellar line normal?
- A line drawn along the longitudinal axis of the radial head and neck should pass through the capitellum
- If line does not pass through capitellum than dislocation of radial head is probable
- Whenver there is a fx of the ulnar shaft must evaluate the radiocapitellar line for poss radial head dislocation (Monteggia fx dislocation)
- This rule is always valid on a true lateral film
- In peds cases the AP view may be misleading
- Is the anterior humeral line normal?
- A line drawn along the ant cortex of the humerus will have at leats 1/3 of the capitellum anterior to it
- If less than 1/3 then strong probability of supracondylar fx w/ distal fragment displaced posteriorly
- Are the ossification centers normal?
- CRITOE (Capitellum, Radial head, Internal epicondyle, Trochlea, Olecranon, Lateral Epicondyle)
- Dislocated elbow may result in avulsion of internal epicondyle
- Because the trochlea ossifies after the internal epicondyle if you see the trochlea you must find the epicondyle!
ADULT INJURIES
1. Radial Head/Neck Fractures
- 50% of elbow injury in adults
- see Elbow Fx lect
2. Olecranon Fx - 2nd most common
20%
- direct blow
- pain,swelling, can't extend elbow
- OR if > 2 mm stepoff
3. Elbow D/L
- 3rd most common jt D/L
- 90% post or postlateral
- 50% have assoc injuries, most
common is med epicondylar fx that
can often get entrapped
- prox radius & coronoid also Fxed
- ulnar injury - 8-21% in post D/L
- higher rate of neurovasc injury
in anterior D/L
- Long arm post splint
Monteggia Fx/D/L
Type I - prox 1/3 of ulna, ant displ of
distal ulna & ant disl of radial head
80%
Type II - post displ of distal ulna &
post D/L or radial head (20%)
- Dislocation of radial head requires ORIF
See Also
Ortho: Elbow Fracture
Ortho: Elbow (Minor)
Peds: Supracondylar
Rads: Elbow Xray Peds
Source
Whiting lect 2001- By Lampe
