The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Vol 72, Issue 4 582-586, Copyright © 1990 by Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc
Arthrodesis of the shoulder in children
JY Mah and JE Hall
Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Ten children had an arthrodesis of the shoulder for a paralytic condition
involving the muscles; nine of them were available for long-term follow-up.
In the children who were eight to fifteen years old at the time of
operation, the angle of arthrodesis was 45 degrees of abduction, 25 degrees
of flexion, and 25 degrees of internal rotation. This angle allowed
symptomless and useful function of the extremity. No patient had a stress
fracture or discomfort when the arm was at rest at follow-up. An
asymptomatic click in the acromioclavicular joint in one patient indicated
that this may be a future site of abnormality. The children apparently
accommodated easily to the arthrodesis of the shoulder. Neither self-image
nor overall function seemed to be impaired by the operation. The over-all
function postoperatively was related to the neurological integrity of the
distal muscles.