Affiliation:
1. ORTON Research Institute and ORTON Orthopaedic Hospital, Helsinki, Finland
Abstract
Radial shortening osteotomy (RSO) as treatment for Kienböck’s disease usually improves patient symptoms for several years. Four small series have also shown that the effect may last for decades, but only two studies have used a patient-based assessment. We examined 16 patients, with a mean age at operation of 32 years, evaluating clinical and radiological results at a mean 25 (range 20 to 33) years after surgery. Three patients had progressive lunate collapse, of whom one patient needed a silicone implant arthroplasty 2 years after RSO and one patient a wrist fusion 16 years after RSO. The time between onset of symptoms and osteotomy in the remaining 14 patients averaged 20 months. The mean VAS for pain was 0.9 at rest, 0.9 with unloaded motion, 1.7 with slight, and 3.0 with heavy exertion. Two patients had marked wrist pain. Compared with the contralateral wrist the mean range of motion was 88%, grip strength was 95%, and key pinch 107%. The Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand score averaged 6.1, and the Mayo wrist score, 79.3. The Lichtman stage remained unchanged in 56% of patients. The inner structure of the lunate improved in all patients, and its shape remained unchanged in half of the cases. Radial shortening osteotomy provides decade-long improvement in 75% of patients and seems to be a reasonable treatment for symptomatic Kienböck’s disease.
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20 articles.
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