- See:
-
Scaphoid Reconstruction for Nonunion
-
Vascular Anatomy of Scaphoid:
- Discussion:
- may be associated w/ longstanding nonunion of
proximal pole fractures, especially
when associated w/ previous surgery;
- AVN of scaphoid is often difficult to diagnose radiographically and therefore it is usually
necessary to assess vascularity of the proximal pole at the time of surgery;
- absence of punctate bleeding in the proximal fragment (after debridement) is the best indicator of AVN;
- following debridement, punctate bleeding should be present from the surface of the scaphoid
while the tourniquet remains elevated;
- Radiographic Findings:
- plain radiographs tend to underestimate the presence of AVN (as compared to intraoperative
bleeding or MRI);
- proximal fragment may have:
- ground-glass appearance or increased bone density;
- loss of trabecular pattern;
- cystic changes;
- subchondral collapse and fragmentation;
- radiographic classification:
- stage 0: none;
- stage 1: patchy areas of radiodensity of proximal pole;
- stage 2: involvement of entire proximal pole;
- stage 3: AVN w/ carpal collapse;
- MRI:
- evolving role;
- Treatment:
-
Four Corner Fusion:
Avascular necrosis after scaphoid fracture: a correlation of magnetic resonance imaging and histology.
Avascular necrosis after scaphoid fracture: a correlation of magnetic resonance imaging and histology.
Late treatment of a dorsal transscaphoid, transtriquetral perilunate wrist dislocation with avascular changes of the lunate.
Surgical Treatment of Nonunion and Avascular Necrosis of the Proximal Part of the Scaphoid in Adolescents