The Journal of hand surgery
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To review the clinical and radiographic outcome of dorsal trans-scaphoid perilunate fracture-dislocations treated with screw fixation of the scaphoid and repair of the lunotriquetral ligament with bone anchors. ⋯ A dorsal approach to the wrist provides adequate exposure for reduction of carpal bones, internal fixation of the scaphoid, and lunotriquetral repair. Although perilunate fracture-dislocations are challenging problems to treat, all of the patients had acceptable pain relief and achieved sufficient range of motion and strength to return to gainful employment.
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To determine the in vitro motion of the scaphoid and lunate during wrist circumduction and wrist dart-throw motions and to see how these motions change after the ligamentous stabilizers of the scaphoid and lunate are sectioned in a manner simulating scapholunate instability. ⋯ The scaphoid and lunate motions were observed to change remarkably after ligamentous sectioning. The observed changes in carpal motion correlate with the clinical observation that after ligamentous injury arthritic changes occur in the radioscaphoid joint and not in the radiolunate joint. Analysis of the injured wrist in positions that combine flexion-extension and radial-ulnar deviation may allow noninvasive diagnosis of specific wrist ligament injuries.
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Fractures of the carpal bones in the coronal plane are encountered rarely and their diagnosis usually is delayed. Coronal hamate fractures are relatively well described but a coronal capitate fracture occurring simultaneously with a coronal hamate fracture is extremely rare. We describe such an injury addressed with fixation of the hamate alone.
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Previous cadaveric data show that disruption of the triangular fibrocartilage complex (TFCC) at the wrist allows 0.5 to 3.0 mm of proximal radius migration. Anatomic studies have documented the presence of superficial and deep fibers of both the palmar and the dorsal distal radioulnar joint (DRUJ) ligaments. The aim of this study was to determine the contribution of the superficial and deep fibers of the DRUJ ligaments to longitudinal forearm stability as measured by ulnar-positive variance. ⋯ Traumatic injury to the TFCC with radiographic evidence of ulnar-positive variance may be an indication of disruption of the deep TFCC fibers.