Litcius/Paper detail

Periprosthetic Postoperative Humeral Fractures After Shoulder Arthroplasty

Joaquín Sánchez‐Sotelo, George S. Athwal

2022Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons17 citationsDOI

Abstract

The increased utilization of shoulder arthroplasty, including revision procedures, combined with rises in life expectancy, is expected to translate into a substantial increase in periprosthetic humeral fractures. The evaluation and management of these fractures needs to be updated to consider fractures that complicate anatomic and reverse arthroplasties and contemporary short-stem and stemless implants. Although conservative treatment is successful in a large proportion of these fractures, several surgical reconstructive techniques are required for the management of all fracture types. Surgical options include internal fixation, graft augmentation, standard revision procedures, and occasionally complex reconstructions including modular segmental prosthesis and allograft prosthetic composites. Most studies on the outcomes of periprosthetic humeral fractures have analyzed small samples and have typically reported on anatomic total shoulders with a standard-length humeral implant. Additional research is required to optimize the management of periprosthetic postoperative humeral fractures in the era of reverse arthroplasty, short stems, and stemless arthroplasty.

Topics & Concepts

PeriprostheticMedicineArthroplastySurgeryProsthesisImplantShouldersInternal fixationFixation (population genetics)HumerusEnvironmental healthPopulationShoulder Injury and TreatmentShoulder and Clavicle InjuriesOrthopaedic implants and arthroplasty