François-Gabriel Midon , Lionel Athlani , Martin Cholley-Roulleau , Colin Piessat , François Dap
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Total wrist arthrodesis epidemiology and prior surgeries survival
This study investigates the indications for first- and second-line total wrist arthrodesis, focusing on conversion delays following prior wrist surgeries and analyzing complications based on the underlying etiology.
We reviewed 121 patients who underwent total wrist arthrodesis over a nine-year period. First-line total arthrodesis was predominantly performed for inflammatory rheumatic conditions or spasticity, while 53% of second-line total arthrodesis were conducted for post-traumatic conditions. The procedures most frequently converted included four-corner arthrodesis (28%), proximal row carpectomy (22%), and radioscapholunate arthrodesis (20%), with mean conversion delays of 3 years, 5 years, and 1.8 years, respectively.
Four-corner arthrodesis was the most commonly converted procedure, while radioscapholunate arthrodesis showed the shortest conversion time, primarily due to pseudarthrosis.
期刊介绍:
As the official publication of the French, Belgian and Swiss Societies for Surgery of the Hand, as well as of the French Society of Rehabilitation of the Hand & Upper Limb, ''Hand Surgery and Rehabilitation'' - formerly named "Chirurgie de la Main" - publishes original articles, literature reviews, technical notes, and clinical cases. It is indexed in the main international databases (including Medline). Initially a platform for French-speaking hand surgeons, the journal will now publish its articles in English to disseminate its author''s scientific findings more widely. The journal also includes a biannual supplement in French, the monograph of the French Society for Surgery of the Hand, where comprehensive reviews in the fields of hand, peripheral nerve and upper limb surgery are presented.
Organe officiel de la Société française de chirurgie de la main, de la Société française de Rééducation de la main (SFRM-GEMMSOR), de la Société suisse de chirurgie de la main et du Belgian Hand Group, indexée dans les grandes bases de données internationales (Medline, Embase, Pascal, Scopus), Hand Surgery and Rehabilitation - anciennement titrée Chirurgie de la main - publie des articles originaux, des revues de la littérature, des notes techniques, des cas clinique. Initialement plateforme d''expression francophone de la spécialité, la revue s''oriente désormais vers l''anglais pour devenir une référence scientifique et de formation de la spécialité en France et en Europe. Avec 6 publications en anglais par an, la revue comprend également un supplément biannuel, la monographie du GEM, où sont présentées en français, des mises au point complètes dans les domaines de la chirurgie de la main, des nerfs périphériques et du membre supérieur.