Abstract
Union with deformity is the most common complication following a distal radial fracture1-5. The deformity may be extra-articular, characterized by loss of length and metaphyseal angulation; it may be intra-articular, involving either the radiocarpal or the radioulnar joint, or both; or it may be a combination of the two. Surgical treatment of a symptomatic malunion of the distal part of the radius has been recognized for more than 200 years. Resection of the distal aspect of the ulna for the management of pain at the distal radioulnar joint after a distal radial fracture, a procedure attributed to Darrach after his description in 19136, had been suggested by Desault in 17917 and again by Moore in 18808. In 1937, Campbell described a corrective osteotomy of the distal part of the radius with use of an interpositional bone graft obtained from the distal part of the ulna9. In 1945, Merle d’Aubigne and Joussement described a multiple-facet curved osteotomy without the need for an interpositional bone graft10. This concept is currently being revisited and will be described. A deformity following fracture of the distal part of the radius is not necessarily symptomatic. In fact, it is not uncommon for an older patient to have acceptable wrist and forearm function without pain even when there is an apparent deformity. Therefore, impairment of function rather than radiographic deformity is the reason to treat a distal radial malunion, and, consequently, the patient’s wrist and forearm function must be assessed. The most common deformity following a malunited extra-articular Colles type of fracture is the loss of the normal volar tilt of the articular surface in the sagittal plane, loss of ulnar inclination in the frontal plane, loss of length relative to the ulna, and …
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More From: The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-American Volume
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