Annales de chirurgie de la main et du membre supérieur : organe officiel des sociétés de chirurgie de la main = Annals of hand and upper limb surgery
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Ann Chir Main Memb Super · Jan 1997
Review[Retrosternal luxation of the clavicle. Apropos of 4 cases surgically treated using a temporary screwed anterior plate and review of the literature].
The authors report 4 new cases of retrosternal dislocation of the clavicle operated by capsular and ligament restoration, and temporary stabilization by anterior plating. The 4 patients were men with a mean age of 17.5 years. The lesion was caused by a sports injury (football, rugby) in 3 out of 4 cases and was related to an indirect mechanism. ⋯ One third of attempts fail, and cases of delayed diagnosis and serious vascular complications, then require surgical treatment. The costoclavicular ligament is repaired either by Burrows's ligamentoplasty or by bone suture; the clavicle is stabilized by bone suture or by anterior plating. The authors do not advocate either joint fixation by Kirschner wire, or resection of the medial end of the clavicle.
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Ann Chir Main Memb Super · Jan 1992
Review Case Reports[Three rare fractures of the radius associated with an ulnar slipped epiphyses].
Over a period of 7 years, three adolescent boys had an associated diaphyseal fracture of the distal third of the radius with separation of the distal ulnar epiphysis. The fracture involved towards early epiphysiodesis of the growth plate of the distal ulna leading to a shortened ulna without any severe functional disability. ⋯ The treatment of this associated lesion is classical emergency, but the radiological follow-up must be extended in time because the growth potential of the forearm bones is important even during adolescence. The onset of a growth disturbance requires rapid surgical epiphysiodesis of the radius to prevent the development of deformity.
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Ann Chir Main Memb Super · Jan 1991
Review[Local and regional anesthesia of the upper limb in emergency hand surgery].
The very conditions of the emergency led the authors to define the indications for the various modalities of local and regional anaesthesia: intravenous regional anaesthesia, nerve trunk blocks, plexus blocks, interdigital block and local infiltration. The parallel development of anaesthetic drugs with variable systemic toxicity and a duration of action inversely proportional to the toxicity now allows precise adaptation of the anaesthesia to the type of lesion, the patient's general condition, the practical conditions of the emergency and the surgical technique selected, provided the anaesthetist is fully aware of the traps to be avoided, which can only be based on a long practice of local and regional anaesthesia in elective surgery.