
Arthroscopic-assisted bone grafting and percutaneous K-wires fixation for the treatment of scaphoid nonunion in the skeletally immature patient
Author(s) -
Young-Keun Lee,
Kibum Kim
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.59
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1536-5964
pISSN - 0025-7974
DOI - 10.1097/md.0000000000024095
Subject(s) - medicine , scaphoid fracture , nonunion , surgery , bone grafting , scaphoid bone , percutaneous , wrist , carpal bones , cancellous bone , internal fixation , bone healing , radiology
Rationale: The treatment methods of pediatric scaphoid nonunion are still controversial. To our knowledge, arthroscopic-assisted treatments for pediatric scaphoid nonunion has not been reported in the English-language literature. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to report the use of arthroscopic-assisted bone grafting for scaphoid nonunion fracture in 3 patients and present a literature review. Patients concerns: Two 15-year-old patients developed carpal joint injuries over a year, prior to their hospital presentation, since they had not received adequate treatment. The third patient, 12 years of age, was diagnosed with scaphoid fracture after a traffic accident and underwent conservative treatment but presented to the hospital due to issues related with bone union. Diagnosis: All 3 patients were diagnosed with scaphoid nonunion at our hospital, using plain wrist radiographs and computed tomography. Interventions: All the patients underwent arthroscopic debridement; 2 patients received autogenous iliac cancellous bone graft, while the other patient received a bone substitute graft. The internal fixation of the scaphoid was performed with K-wires. Outcomes: Bone unions were achieved in all patients, and the final follow-up resulted in successful outcomes. Lessons: Arthroscopic-assisted bone grafting and percutaneous K-wire fixation can be considered as a good method for the treatment of pediatric scaphoid nonunion fractures. Therefore, it is a primary treatment option for symptomatic scaphoid nonunion fracture and displaced fractures.