The “floating ulna” injury in adults: a case report, literature review and proposed injury classification

Abstract Background Ipsilateral Galeazzi fracture with elbow dislocation, namely the “floating ulna” injury, is a rare injury pattern. A few reports have described this type of injury and its treatment. Case presentation A 33-year-old female at 38+ weeks gestational age presented with Galeazzi fract...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tian He, Xin Wang, Shui Sun, Lugang Zhou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-01-01
Series:BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12891-020-03880-4
id doaj-8560941ca70d4bc99309ee0b021b51c6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8560941ca70d4bc99309ee0b021b51c62021-01-10T12:27:06ZengBMCBMC Musculoskeletal Disorders1471-24742021-01-012211610.1186/s12891-020-03880-4The “floating ulna” injury in adults: a case report, literature review and proposed injury classificationTian He0Xin Wang1Shui Sun2Lugang Zhou3Department of joint surgery, Shandong Provincial Hospital, Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong UniversityDepartment of Orthopedics Surgery, Yantai Yuhuangding Hospital Affiliated to Medical College of Qingdao UniversityDepartment of joint surgery, Shandong Provincial Hospital, Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong UniversityDepartment of Orthopedics Surgery, Yantai Yuhuangding Hospital Affiliated to Medical College of Qingdao UniversityAbstract Background Ipsilateral Galeazzi fracture with elbow dislocation, namely the “floating ulna” injury, is a rare injury pattern. A few reports have described this type of injury and its treatment. Case presentation A 33-year-old female at 38+ weeks gestational age presented with Galeazzi fracture and posterolateral elbow dislocation of the left upper extremity. The patient was treated with closed reduction of the elbow, open reduction, and internal fixation of the radial shaft fracture with a dynamic compression plate and K-wire stabilization of the unstable distal radioulnar joint. At the 12-month follow-up, the patient had no pain or signs of instability. Range of motion was 0–135° at the elbow, 70° extension and 80° flexion at the wrist, and 80° supination and 80° pronation at the forearm. Conclusion The “floating ulna” injury is a rare and special injury pattern with ipsilateral Galeazzi fracture and elbow dislocation. This type of injury was likely caused by significant amount of deforming force and the unique position of upper limb when the patient fell from a height of 1–2 m in high-energy trauma.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12891-020-03880-4Galeazzi fractureElbow joint dislocationFloating ulnaInjury classification
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tian He
Xin Wang
Shui Sun
Lugang Zhou
spellingShingle Tian He
Xin Wang
Shui Sun
Lugang Zhou
The “floating ulna” injury in adults: a case report, literature review and proposed injury classification
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
Galeazzi fracture
Elbow joint dislocation
Floating ulna
Injury classification
author_facet Tian He
Xin Wang
Shui Sun
Lugang Zhou
author_sort Tian He
title The “floating ulna” injury in adults: a case report, literature review and proposed injury classification
title_short The “floating ulna” injury in adults: a case report, literature review and proposed injury classification
title_full The “floating ulna” injury in adults: a case report, literature review and proposed injury classification
title_fullStr The “floating ulna” injury in adults: a case report, literature review and proposed injury classification
title_full_unstemmed The “floating ulna” injury in adults: a case report, literature review and proposed injury classification
title_sort “floating ulna” injury in adults: a case report, literature review and proposed injury classification
publisher BMC
series BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
issn 1471-2474
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Background Ipsilateral Galeazzi fracture with elbow dislocation, namely the “floating ulna” injury, is a rare injury pattern. A few reports have described this type of injury and its treatment. Case presentation A 33-year-old female at 38+ weeks gestational age presented with Galeazzi fracture and posterolateral elbow dislocation of the left upper extremity. The patient was treated with closed reduction of the elbow, open reduction, and internal fixation of the radial shaft fracture with a dynamic compression plate and K-wire stabilization of the unstable distal radioulnar joint. At the 12-month follow-up, the patient had no pain or signs of instability. Range of motion was 0–135° at the elbow, 70° extension and 80° flexion at the wrist, and 80° supination and 80° pronation at the forearm. Conclusion The “floating ulna” injury is a rare and special injury pattern with ipsilateral Galeazzi fracture and elbow dislocation. This type of injury was likely caused by significant amount of deforming force and the unique position of upper limb when the patient fell from a height of 1–2 m in high-energy trauma.
topic Galeazzi fracture
Elbow joint dislocation
Floating ulna
Injury classification
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12891-020-03880-4
work_keys_str_mv AT tianhe thefloatingulnainjuryinadultsacasereportliteraturereviewandproposedinjuryclassification
AT xinwang thefloatingulnainjuryinadultsacasereportliteraturereviewandproposedinjuryclassification
AT shuisun thefloatingulnainjuryinadultsacasereportliteraturereviewandproposedinjuryclassification
AT lugangzhou thefloatingulnainjuryinadultsacasereportliteraturereviewandproposedinjuryclassification
AT tianhe floatingulnainjuryinadultsacasereportliteraturereviewandproposedinjuryclassification
AT xinwang floatingulnainjuryinadultsacasereportliteraturereviewandproposedinjuryclassification
AT shuisun floatingulnainjuryinadultsacasereportliteraturereviewandproposedinjuryclassification
AT lugangzhou floatingulnainjuryinadultsacasereportliteraturereviewandproposedinjuryclassification
_version_ 1724342893552861184