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Review
. 2014 Feb;100(1 Suppl):S45-53.
doi: 10.1016/j.otsr.2013.06.015. Epub 2014 Jan 21.

Post-traumatic carpal instability

Affiliations
Review

Post-traumatic carpal instability

C Chantelot. Orthop Traumatol Surg Res. 2014 Feb.

Abstract

The complexity of the carpus explains the difficulty treating carpal injuries. Lesions are dominated by perilunate dislocation, scapholunate dislocation, and scaphoid fractures. The other injuries are trivial. Symptoms include pain and loss of wrist strength, reversible for an acute and well-treated lesion. Too often, these ligament injuries are diagnosed late. For delays longer than 6 weeks, ligament repair is ineffective. These old, complex lesions are potentially highly arthritic in the radiocarpal and mediocarpal joints. Improvements in wrist surgery have mitigated these chronic lesions. Various surgical techniques can preserve a functional wrist; wrist arthrodesis is no longer the only solution for these arthritic wrists. Over the past decade, arthroscopy has contributed to better understanding the injuries of the carpus as well as to better healing them. For acute or chronic ligament injuries without degenerative osteoarthritis, arthroscopy is the treatment of the future. This technique involves a long learning curve and the various arthroscopic techniques must be validated.

Keywords: Arthritis; Carpal; Instability.

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