The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (American) 84:382-387 (2002)
© 2002 The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc.
Operative Treatment of Elbow Contracture in Patients Twenty-one Years of Age or Younger
Anthony A. Stans, MD,
N. G.J. Maritz,
Shawn W. ODriscoll, MD, PhD and
Bernard F. Morrey, MD
Investigation performed at the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation,
Rochester, Minnesota
Anthony A. Stans, MD
Shawn W. ODriscoll, MD, PhD
Bernard F. Morrey, MD
Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street S.W., Rochester, MN 55905
N.G.J. Maritz
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Pretoria Academic Hospital,
Private Bag X169, Pretoria 0001, South Africa
The authors did not receive grants or outside funding in support
of their research or preparation of this manuscript. They did not
receive payments or other benefits or a commitment or agreement
to provide such benefits from a commercial entity. No commercial
entity paid or directed, or agreed to pay or direct, any benefits
to any research fund, foundation, educational institution, or other
charitable or nonprofit organization with which the authors are
affiliated or associated.
A video supplement to this article is available from the Video
Journal of Orthopaedics. A video clip is available at the
JBJS web site, www.jbjs.org. The Video Journal of Orthopaedics can
be contacted at (805) 962-3410, web site: www.vjortho.com.
Background: Elbow contracture is a recognized
sequela of traumatic and developmental elbow disorders, but little
information is available regarding the surgical treatment of elbow
stiffness in the pediatric population.
Methods: Thirty-seven patients who had had open
surgical release of an elbow contracture at a mean age of sixteen
years (range, ten to twenty years) were retrospectively studied
after a mean duration of follow-up of fifteen months (range, six
to forty-four months). The elbow contracture was posttraumatic in
twenty-eight patients. The operation consisted of a capsular release with
removal of osseous impediments to motion as necessary. No patient
had muscle or tendon-lengthening.
Results: The total arc of motion improved from a
mean of 66° preoperatively to a mean of 94° postoperatively; however,
only twenty-eight patients (76%) had an improvement of
10° and only seventeen (46%) achieved a functional arc
of motion of 100° (from 30° to 130°). Two patients lost motion after
surgery. These results are less favorable than the results of previous
studies of both pediatric and adult patients. Patients in whom the
contracture had been caused by a simple dislocation of the elbow
or an extra-articular fracture tended to have better results than
those in whom the contracture was due to other causes.
Conclusions: The results of surgical treatment of
elbow stiffness in pediatric patients are less favorable and less
predictable than those in adult patients.

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