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Elbow subluxation and dislocation. A spectrum of instability.

555

Citations

0

References

1992

Year

TLDR

Dislocation is the final stage of elbow instability, progressing from lateral to medial soft‑tissue disruption driven by posterolateral rotation. Sequential ligament and capsule releases in 13 fresh elbows produced posterior dislocations under external rotation and valgus moments, and a fall on an outstretched hand would generate an internal rotation on the elbow that creates an external rotation/valgus moment during flexion. Kinematic tracking revealed posterior dislocations involved 34–50° posterolateral rotation and 5–23° valgus at ~80° flexion; AMCL origin‑to‑insertion distance did not increase, valgus laxity remained unchanged after reduction, and the data support reducing posterior dislocations in supination and commencing hinged cast‑brace rehabilitation in full pronation when valgus stability is confirmed.

Abstract

After sequential releases of the ligaments and capsules of 13 fresh autopsy specimen elbows, external rotation and valgus moments with axial forces resulted in posterior dislocations in 12 of the 13 with the anterior medical collateral ligament (AMCL) intact. Kinematic displacements measured with a three-dimensional electromagnetic tracking device showed that dislocation involved posterolateral rotation of 34 degrees-50 degrees and 5 degrees-23 degrees valgus at about 80 degrees flexion. Dislocation is the final of three sequential stages of elbow instability resulting from posterolateral rotation, with soft-tissue disruption progressing from lateral to medial. In each stage, the pathoanatomy correlated with the pattern and degree of instability. Testing for valgus stability of the elbow during simulated active flexion revealed no significant increase (-0.3 degrees-2.4 degrees) in valgus laxity after reduction compared with the intact specimens (p greater than 0.05, beta = 0.1, delta = 2.5 degrees). In no case did the digitized AMCL origin-to-insertion distance increase beyond normal during the dislocation (p less than 0.01). The mechanism of dislocation during a fall on the outstretched hand would involve the body "rotating internally" on the elbow, which experiences an external rotation/valgus moment as it flexes. Posterior dislocations should therefore be reduced in supination. If valgus stability in pronation is demonstrated, the AMCL can be assumed to be intact, and rehabilitation in a hinged cast-brace with the elbow in full pronation can be commenced immediately.