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The use of ultrasound for monitoring reduction and ulnar nerve subluxation in pediatric humeral supracondylar fractures

•Intraoperative ultrasound is a reliable, safe alternative to fluoroscopy for pediatric supracondylar fractures.•Ultrasound use improves reduction accuracy, radiographic outcomes, and reduces malunions compared to traditional methods.•Real-time ultrasound prevents ulnar nerve injury during medial pi...

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Published in:European journal of radiology 2024-01, Vol.170, p.111201-111201, Article 111201
Main Authors: Shih, Chien-An, Huang, Ming-Tung, Chern, Tai-Chang, Shao, Chung-Jung, Wu, Kuo-Chen, Lin, Chii-Jeng, Jou, I-Ming, Wu, Po-Ting
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container_title European journal of radiology
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creator Shih, Chien-An
Huang, Ming-Tung
Chern, Tai-Chang
Shao, Chung-Jung
Wu, Kuo-Chen
Lin, Chii-Jeng
Jou, I-Ming
Wu, Po-Ting
description •Intraoperative ultrasound is a reliable, safe alternative to fluoroscopy for pediatric supracondylar fractures.•Ultrasound use improves reduction accuracy, radiographic outcomes, and reduces malunions compared to traditional methods.•Real-time ultrasound prevents ulnar nerve injury during medial pinning by precise position tracking. Traditional treatment for displaced humeral supracondylar fractures (SCFs) in children involves closed reduction (CR) under fluoroscopic guidance, percutaneous pinning, and immobilization with a long-arm cast. This study aims to explore the viability of using radiation-free ultrasound (US) for guiding CR and tracking ulnar nerve dynamics during medial pinning, contrasting the US method with the conventional cross pinning technique. We assessed 70 children with acute displaced SCFs. The US group (n = 30) underwent US-guided reduction, whereas the traditional group (n = 40) underwent fluoroscopy-guided reduction. Both groups received percutaneous cross pinning and subsequent cast immobilization. Postoperative outcomes were compared between the two methods after a 6-month follow-up. In the US group, ultrasonography assessed fracture displacement distances before and after CR. The angle at which the ulnar nerve relocated to the cubital tunnel during elbow extension was documented using real-time US monitoring during medial pinning. The US group demonstrated improved reduction accuracy, increased range of motion, superior restoration of both Baumann and Humeroulnar angles, and a decreased incidence of malunions compared to the traditional group (all p  0.90). In the US group, no ulnar nerve injury was noted, compared to 2.5 % in the traditional group, and real-time US observations revealed ulnar nerve hypermobility, with 53.3 % of patients exhibiting anterior ulnar nerve subluxation at 120° elbow flexion, 40 % at 90°, 16.7 % at 60°, and none at 30° flexion. Ultrasound is as reliable as fluoroscopy for evaluating fracture reductions. The use of intra-operative ultrasound significantly improves reduction accuracy and radiographic outcomes while reducing the risk of ulnar nerve injury.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ejrad.2023.111201
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Traditional treatment for displaced humeral supracondylar fractures (SCFs) in children involves closed reduction (CR) under fluoroscopic guidance, percutaneous pinning, and immobilization with a long-arm cast. This study aims to explore the viability of using radiation-free ultrasound (US) for guiding CR and tracking ulnar nerve dynamics during medial pinning, contrasting the US method with the conventional cross pinning technique. We assessed 70 children with acute displaced SCFs. The US group (n = 30) underwent US-guided reduction, whereas the traditional group (n = 40) underwent fluoroscopy-guided reduction. Both groups received percutaneous cross pinning and subsequent cast immobilization. Postoperative outcomes were compared between the two methods after a 6-month follow-up. In the US group, ultrasonography assessed fracture displacement distances before and after CR. The angle at which the ulnar nerve relocated to the cubital tunnel during elbow extension was documented using real-time US monitoring during medial pinning. The US group demonstrated improved reduction accuracy, increased range of motion, superior restoration of both Baumann and Humeroulnar angles, and a decreased incidence of malunions compared to the traditional group (all p &lt; 0.05). The ultrasonographic measurement of fracture displacement was comparable with that of fluoroscopy (intraclass correlation coefficient &gt; 0.90). In the US group, no ulnar nerve injury was noted, compared to 2.5 % in the traditional group, and real-time US observations revealed ulnar nerve hypermobility, with 53.3 % of patients exhibiting anterior ulnar nerve subluxation at 120° elbow flexion, 40 % at 90°, 16.7 % at 60°, and none at 30° flexion. Ultrasound is as reliable as fluoroscopy for evaluating fracture reductions. 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source ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024
subjects Fracture reduction
Humeral supracondylar fracture
Iatrogenic ulnar nerve injury
Ulnar nerve subluxation
Ultrasound
title The use of ultrasound for monitoring reduction and ulnar nerve subluxation in pediatric humeral supracondylar fractures
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