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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12710/18040
Title: Our experience in the surgical treatment of acromioclavicular dislocation
Authors: Croitor, Dan
Negru, Teodor
Cașu, lleana
Farhangee, Arsalan
Issue Date: 2014
Publisher: Ministry of Health of the Republic of Moldova, State Medical and Pharmaceutical University Nicolae Testemitanu, Medical Students and Residents Association
Citation: CROITOR, Dan, NEGRU,Teodor, CAȘU, lleana, FARHANGEE, Arsalan. Our experience in the surgical treatment of acromioclavicular dislocation. In: MedEspera: the 5th Internat. Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors: abstract book. Chișinău: S. n., 2014, p. 180.
Abstract: Background: Acromioclavicular dislocation is not a rare post-traumatic lesion. The treatment is still a controversial problem due to the inconstant results of the orthopaedic or surgical approach. The proof is the very high number of methods developed over 50 orthopaedic treatments and over 140 the surgical ones. Starting from Weaver-Dunn procedure we have performed a surgical technique which had pleased us with its results. Material and methods: We have performed a surgery on 21 patients (17 males and 4 females) aged between 23 - 47 years which had a clinical and radiological diagnostic of acromioclavicular dislocation. The surgical technique uses the coracoacromial ligament which is reinserted into a tunnel in the lateral third of the clavicle and is fixed with a screw. In 13 cases we cut the ligament straight from the bone and reinforced it with a Nr.l polyglactine or poliglicolic acid wire, and in 4 cases we harvested it with its acromial bone insertion to achieve more length and strength of fixation. Also the acromioclavicular joint it was secured with a K wire for more stability. We have immobilized the shoulder for 28 days, and the kinetotherapy was performed for another 14-21 days. The wires were removed after 6-10 weeks, the interference screw was not removed. In 3 cases the coracoacromial ligament appeared to be too short for our purposes, and we converted the procedure to another technique. The follow-up period lasted no longer than 3 month in all cases and was done when the patients have returned to theft previous activity. Results: After kinetotherapy fast and good recovery was obtained with full or almost full range of motion also, good stability and mobility of the shoulder was obtained. We haven’t encountered any recurrent dislocation in 17 cases. In 3 cases we had a too short coracoacromial ligament, in one of these 3 cases our procedure failed and in the other 2 cases we saw the failure from the beginning of surgery. In all 3 cases we have converted the surgical technique to another procedure. These cases were excluded from final evaluation. The Glorion-Delplace score was 10 in 14 cases and 9 in 3 cases, due to the lack of shoulder mobility. The heterotopic ossification was encountered in 6 cases, but pain-free and with no impair on the joint function, a pain-free shoulder was noticed in all cases. Conclusions: This technique is faster (30-60 minutes) and easier than current procedures (DewarBarrington or Weaver-Dunn procedures). This procedure is more physiological than all others - replaces a ligament with another in about the same position. It also provides a passive stability and it doesn’t modify the forces exerted on the bone, there is no momentum exerted on clavicle.
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: MedEspera: The 5th International Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors, May 14-17, 2014, Chisinau, Republic of Moldova
URI: http://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/18040
Appears in Collections:MedEspera 2014

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