Journal of shoulder and elbow surgery
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J Shoulder Elbow Surg · Sep 2002
Effects of plate location and selection on the stability of midshaft clavicle osteotomies: a biomechanical study.
Operative fixation of midshaft clavicle fractures is controversial with few biomechanical data to assist surgical decision making. The purpose of this 2-phase biomechanical investigation is to report on the effects of plate location and selection on the stability of midshaft clavicle fractures. Thirty matched pairs of human adult formalin-fixed clavicles were used. ⋯ In retained stiffness the performance of the LCDC-plated constructs significantly exceeded that of the DC plate in torsion (P <.05), whereas in load to failure the LCDC plate withstood significantly more compressive load than the reconstruction plate (P <.05). We concluded that clavicles plated at the superior aspect exhibit significantly greater biomechanical stability than those plated at the anterior aspect. Furthermore, we concluded that the LCDC plate offers significantly greater biomechanical stability than the reconstruction and DC plates.