Abstract

To determine whether preservation of blood supply to the index metacarpophalangeal joint decreases the rate of physeal arrest. A retrospective review of 41 pollicized digits in 35 patients with 2-year minimum radiographic follow-up was conducted at a single institution. Other complications evaluated included nonunion at the pollicized digit base and clinical instability at the new carpometacarpal joint. Findings were compared to historical controls, which were performed by our group prior to routine identification and sparing of the metacarpophalangeal joint blood supply. No other modifications to surgical technique were made between the previous and current patient cohorts. Two pollicized digits in two different patients had radiographic evidence of physeal arrest, one of which was partial and the other complete, for an arrest rate of 4.9%. This was significantly less than the arrest rate in our historical cohort of 24.7% (21 of 85 patients). Five patients did not have radiographic bony union at the base of the index metacarpal, but only one patient had clinical instability at the new carpometacarpal joint. Significantly fewer patients who underwent index finger pollicization with preservation of the metacarpophalangeal joint blood supply went on to develop physeal arrest when compared to patients who underwent pollicization prior to adoption of this technique. This finding suggests that sparing of the physeal blood supply is preventative against proximal phalanx physeal arrest. Therapeutic IV.

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