1996
DOI: 10.1016/s0753-9053(96)80035-4
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Surgical treatment of madelung disease by the sauvé-kapandji technique

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Cited by 12 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…These procedures belong in general to three broad groups: first, surgery to correct the radius (epiphysiodesis, desepiphysiodesis, corrective osteotomy [5,6,13,14] or progressive lengthening [12]); second, surgery to correct the ulna (ulna reduction osteotomy [3,18], resection-stabilisation of the ulnar head using a Darrach procedure [6,18], radioulnar arthrodesis using the Sauvé-Kapandji procedure [2,6]); and third, the combined techniques comprising surgery on both radius and ulna [6,7,13,18,19,23]. There are too few consistent series with sufficient follow-up in the literature to allow assessment of the results of these techniques [3,7,16,18,19].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These procedures belong in general to three broad groups: first, surgery to correct the radius (epiphysiodesis, desepiphysiodesis, corrective osteotomy [5,6,13,14] or progressive lengthening [12]); second, surgery to correct the ulna (ulna reduction osteotomy [3,18], resection-stabilisation of the ulnar head using a Darrach procedure [6,18], radioulnar arthrodesis using the Sauvé-Kapandji procedure [2,6]); and third, the combined techniques comprising surgery on both radius and ulna [6,7,13,18,19,23]. There are too few consistent series with sufficient follow-up in the literature to allow assessment of the results of these techniques [3,7,16,18,19].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, this procedure may destabilise the wrist by promoting ulnar and volar shift [6,13,18], even if this does not always have a clinical relevance [17]. Other authors [2,6,23] suggest a Sauvé-Kapandji procedure which offers good clinical results. For De Smet et al [6], this procedure guarantees stabilisation of the distal radioulnar joint surface and prevents ulnar shift of the wrist [18] by restoring ulnar support.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…After the deformity was corrected, the internal osteosynthesis was performed using an AO plate type T, and the open reduction was performed (through a volar incision), internal fixation (with plate and screw) and autogenous graft removed from the right iliac bone. By blocking pronation-supination movements in patient # 3, simultaneously, this radioulnar joint complication was treated by using the Sauvè-Kapandji technique (1,10) .…”
Section: Surgical Techniquementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many surgical procedures have been described, including excision of the distal ulna (Nielsen, 1977;Ranawat et al, 1975;Schmidt-Rohlfing et al, 2001), ulnar shortening osteotomies (Bruno et al, 2003;Nielsen, 1977;Schmidt-Rohlfing et al, 2001), wrist denervation (Schmidt-Rohlfing et al, 2001), radiocarpal arthrodesis combined with distal ulna excision (Henry and Thorburn, 1967), Sauve´-Kapandji procedure (Angelini et al, 1996), epiphysiodesis (Vickers and Nielsen, 1992), opening or closing wedge osteotomy of the distal radius (De Paula et al, 2006;Houshian et al, 2000;Murphy et al, 1996, Schmidt-Rohlfing et al, 2001, or a combination of the above (Burrows, 1937;Dos Reis et al, 1998;Nielsen, 1977;Ranawat et al, 1975;Salon et al, 2000;Watson et al, 1993;White and Weiland, 1987). Due to the rarity of the condition, few studies in the literature describe more than 15 patients.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%