Abstract

We retrospectively report the outcomes of several cases in which acute Seymour fractures were treated by open reduction of displaced distal bony fragments with concurrent nail repair, following complete incision and drainage without K-wire fixation. Among 21 patients surgically treated between March 2004 and December 2018, the final 12 were evaluated after at least 2 years of follow-up. All children/adolescents presented more than 24 h after the injury. All injuries were unreduced in the emergency department, with typical features of skin disruption around the eponychium/perionychium. Reduction was maintained without a K-wire after repairing the bone-periosteum-nail bed-nail plate of the distal fragment and the corresponding physis-periosteum-germinal matrix-proximal nail-fold of the proximal stump. Dorsal angulation, finger length, postoperative pain on visual analog scale (VAS), Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (DASH) score, and active range of motion (ROM) were evaluated at the final follow-up. The mean patient age was 9.3 years (range, 3–13 years) and the mean time from injury to surgery was 35 h (range, 28–44 h). Only one child suffered a superficial infection; however, it resolved with 1 week of oral antibiotic treatment. At the final follow-up, mean dorsal angulation was 0.50° ± 1.24°; the length ratio compared with the corresponding contralateral phalanx was 98% (both, P > 0.05). The final pain on VAS, DASH score, and ROM ratio were 0.25 ± 0.45, 0.83 ± 1.34, and 99 ± 2%, respectively. Unreduced Seymour fractures presenting more than 24 h after the injury were treated by proper debridement and reduction of the fracture without the use of a K-wire. However, to determine whether the infection rate is definitively lower, this procedure should be compared with the conventional procedure using a K-wire.Level of Evidence: Therapeutic level IV

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