Skip Navigation
Skip to contents

J Korean Soc Fract : Journal of the Korean Society of Fractures

OPEN ACCESS

Articles

Page Path
HOME > > Volume 11(2); 1998 > Article
Original Article
Humeral Fractures Associated by Forearm Fractures
Ho Jung Kang, Kae Yong Han, Kyu Jyun Yang, Jin Oh Park
Journal of the Korean Society of Fractures 1998;11(2):405-412.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.12671/jksf.1998.11.2.405
Published online: June 23, 2016

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Yongdong Severance Hospital, college of Medicine, Yonsei University, seoul, Korea.

Copyright © The Korean Fracture Society

  • 108 Views
  • 1 Download
prev next
  • We reviewed fractured patients in Yongdong Severance Hospital for 10 years(1987-96), and collected 42 fractured patients who had concomittent ipsilateral humeral fractures and forearm fractures. The causes of injury were falling down in 21, slipping down in 2, motor vehicle accident in 15, machinery injuries in 2, crushing injury in 1 and ski injury in 1. among them 13 patients were under 15 years old. Nine cases of supracondylar fractures, three cases of lateral condylar fractures and one case of proximal humeral fractures were included. Patterns of combined forearm fractures were diverse. Twenty-three cases were occurred in the age between 16 and 59 years. Fracture patterns were very complicated in both humerus and forearm in this age. Most common humeral fracture was midshaft fracture and forearm was both forearm bone fracture. The fractures were resulted from relatively more severe traumatic event in this age than other ages. Number of patients over 60 years was six. four of them had proximal humeral fractures, one of them distal humeral fracture and one of them humeral medial comdylar fracture. Forearm fracture patterns were various but the olecranon fracture was the most common forearm fracture(4/6) in the aged. We treated fractures by many combinations of operative and conservative means. Generally K-wires were applied to the children when internal fixation was indicated. The shaft of long bones were fixated usually by dynamic compression plate and comminuted articular fractures by Egyre plate or K-wires. The average follow up period was 15 months(5-35 months). 17 complications were resulted. There were 4 nonunions, 3 elbow ankylosises, 1 Volkmann's ischemic contracture, 7 nerve paralysises(4 ulna nerve, 3 radial nerve) and 2 infections.

Figure & Data

REFERENCES

    Citations

    Citations to this article as recorded by  

      • Cite
        CITE
        export Copy Download
        Close
        Download Citation
        Download a citation file in RIS format that can be imported by all major citation management software, including EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks, and Reference Manager.

        Format:
        • RIS — For EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks, and most other reference management software
        • BibTeX — For JabRef, BibDesk, and other BibTeX-specific software
        Include:
        • Citation for the content below
        Humeral Fractures Associated by Forearm Fractures
        J Korean Soc Fract. 1998;11(2):405-412.   Published online April 30, 1998
        Close
      • XML DownloadXML Download
      We recommend
      Humeral Fractures Associated by Forearm Fractures
      Humeral Fractures Associated by Forearm Fractures

      J Korean Soc Fract : Journal of the Korean Society of Fractures
      Close layer
      TOP