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4.3

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(70)

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  • Summary
    • Medial Ulnar Collateral Ligament Injuries are characterized by attenuation or rupture of the ulnar collateral ligament of the elbow leading to valgus instability in overhead throwing athletes.
    • Diagnosis is usually made by a combination of physical exam and MRI studies.
    • Treatment for most individuals is rest and physical therapy. Surgery is reserved for high level overhead athletes such as pitchers.
  • Epidemiology
    • Incidence
      • literature shows increasing occurrence of UCL injuries and reconstructions
      • becoming more common among high school and amateur pitchers
    • Demographics
      • overhead athletes who place significant valgus stress on their elbows
      • originally described among javelin throwers, now much more common in baseball pitchers
      • relatively uncommon in skeletally immature throwing athletes
        • little leaguers' elbow
          • more common cause of medial elbow pain with decreased throwing effectiveness and distance
    • Risk factors
      • exceeding youth baseball pitch count and inning restrictions
      • higher pitch velocity
      • deficits along kinetic chain (shoulder and core weakness, loss of shoulder motion, etc.)
  • Etiology
    • Pathophysiology
      • mechanism of injury
        • acute trauma
          • often associated with elbow dislocations
        • overuse injury
          • biomechanical forces
            • microtrauma from repetitive valgus stress leads to rupture of the anterior band of the medial UCL
            • baseball pitchers place significant valgus stress on the elbow in the late cocking and early acceleration phase of throwing
            • elbow valgus load increases with poor throwing mechanics and decreases with trunk-scapular kinesis, forearm pronation, dynamic flexor-pronator stabilization
            • valgus load is highest in the late cocking/acceleration phase of throwing
        • iatrogenic
          • excessive olecranon osteophyte resection places the MCL at risk
    • Associated conditions
      • traction-related ulnar neuritis
      • olecranon (posteromedial) impingement
      • elbow arthritis
  • Anatomy
    • Osseous
      • elbow is complex hinge composed of ulnohumeral, radiocapitellar, and radioulnar joints
      • valgus carrying angle ranging from 6 to 11 degrees
    • Ligaments
      • medial ulnar collateral ligament (UCL)
      • divided into three components
        • anterior oblique ligament
          • strongest and most significant stabilizer to valgus stress
          • courses from anteroinferior ridge on medial epicondyle to 2.8 mm distal to the ulna articular margin on the sublime tubercle
          • mean length of 54 mm
          • subdivides into anterior and posterior bands.
            • anterior band is primary restraint to valgus stress, exhibiting nearly isometric strain during elbow ROM
            • posterior band exhibits increasing strain during higher degrees of elbow flexion
        • posterior oblique ligament (posterior bundle)
          • demonstrates the greatest change in tension from flexion to extension
          • tighter in flexion
        • transverse ligament
          • no contribution to stability
    • Biomechanics
      • elbow stability evenly split between osseous and soft tissue structures
      • UCL primary restraint to valgus stress from 30 to 120 degrees of flexion
        • flexor-pronator and joint capsule also contribute
  • Presentation
    • History
      • acute injuries may present with a "pop" associated with pain and difficulty throwing
    • Symptoms
      • decreased throwing performance
        • loss of velocity
        • loss of control and accuracy
      • pain
        • medial or posterior elbow pain during late cocking and acceleration phases of throwing
        • many throwers also have posteromedial pain due to valgus extension overload felt during the deceleration phase
      • ulnar nerve symptoms
        • paresthesias down ulnar arm into ring and small fingers
    • Physical examination
      • inspection
        • tenderness along elbow at or near MCL origin
          • posteromedial tenderness may be due to valgus extension overload
        • evaluate the integrity of the flexor-pronator mass
        • evaluate for presence of palmaris longus tendon
      • range of motion
        • seasoned throwers may lack full extension
        • evaluate shoulder and rest of kinetic chain
      • neurovascular
        • evaluate for ulnar neuropathy and/or subluxation
      • provocative tests
        • valgus stress test
          • flex elbow to 20 to 30 degrees (unlocks the olecranon), externally rotate the humerus, and apply valgus stress
          • 50% sensitive
        • milking maneuver
          • creates valgus stress by pulling on the patient's thumb with the forearm supinated and elbow flexed at 90 degrees
          • patient may be supine or seated/standing
          • positive test is a subjective apprehension, instability, or pain at the MCL origin
        • moving valgus stress test
          • place elbow in same position as the "milking maneuver" and apply a valgus stress while the elbow is ranged through the full arc of flexion and extension
          • positive test is a subjective apprehension, instability, or pain at the MCL origin between 70 and 120 degrees
          • 100% sensitive and 75% specific
  • Imaging
    • Radiographs
      • recommended views
        • AP and lateral of the elbow
          • static x-rays are often normal
          • may show loose bodies or calcifications of UCL
      • optional views
        • oblique views to evaluate the olecranon
        • gravity or manual stress radiographs of both elbows
          • may show medial joint-line opening >3 mm (diagnostic)
      • findings
        • assess for a posteromedial osteophyte (due to valgus extension overload)
    • MRI
      • indications
        • high suspicion for UCL injury and/or intra-articular pathology
      • MR-arthrogram - diagnostic
        • use of dye more accurate
        • sensitivity 92%, specificity 100%
      • findings
        • thickened ligament (chronic injury), calcifications, and tears
        • midsubtance tears or proximal/distal avulsions
        • full-thickness or partial undersurface tears
        • capsular "T-sign" with contrast extravasation
    • Dynamic ultrasound
      • can evaluate laxity with valgus stress dynamically
      • sensitivity and specificity operator dependent
  • Differential
    • Medial epicondylitis
    • Flexor-pronator strain
    • Ulnar neuropathy
    • Valgus extension overload
  • Treatment
    • Nonoperative
      • rest and physical therapy
        • indications
          • first line treatment in most cases
          • partial tears
        • outcomes
          • 42% return to preinjury level of sporting activity at an average of 24 weeks
    • Operative
      • UCL anterior band ligament reconstruction (Tommy John Surgery)
        • indications
          • high-level throwers that want to continue competitive sports
          • failed nonoperative management in partial tears and willing to undergo extensive rehabilitation
        • outcomes
          • 90% return to preinjury levels of throwing with newer reconstruction techniques
          • humeral docking associated with better patient outcomes and lower complication rate compared to figure-of-8 fixation
          • humeral docking has shown higher rates of return to sport compared to Jobe and modified Jobe techniques
          • humeral docking and cortical button techniques are biomechanically stronger than figure-of-8 and interference screw fixation
          • humeral docking with interference screw fixation on the ulnar side showed 95% strength of the native UCL
      • UCL repair
        • indications
          • not clarified in the literature
          • mostly performed in young athletes with avulsion-type tear patterns
        • outcomes
          • originally performed with poor results, replaced by reconstruction
          • multiple, recent case series show promising results with novel, augmented techniques
  • Techniques
    • Rest and physical therapy
      • technique
        • 6 weeks of cessation from throwing
        • initiate physical therapy for flexor-pronator strengthening and improving throwing mechanics (after 6 weeks and symptoms/pain have resolved)
        • progressive return to throwing program
    • UCL anterior band ligament reconstruction
      • overview
        • various modifications of original Jobe technique exist
        • all create an anatomic reconstruction of the native ligament from medial epicondyle to ulnar sublime tubercle
          • none are stronger than native ligament
      • approach
        • flexor-pronator muscle-splitting approach (decreased morbidity of historic flexor-pronator mass detachment)
          • some surgeons elevate flexor-pronator mass when perfomring modified Jobe technique
        • in-situ ulnar nerve decompression
          • patients without pre-operative ulnar nerve symptoms should not undergo routine ulnar nerve decompression or transposition
          • patients with pre-operative ulnar nerve symptoms may be treated with isolated ulnar nerve decompression with or without transposition
            • patients with ulnar nerve subluxation should be treated with ulnar nerve transposition
        • UCL and joint capsule identified, ligament repaired in side-to-side fashion
      • soft tissue
        • palmaris longus autograft most common graft (gracilis autograft or allograft also options)
          • single, distal transverse incision centered over palmaris
          • tendon identified and tagged with suture, underlying median nerve protected
          • tendon followed proximally with additional incision made centered over tendon
          • confirming enough length obtained, tendon harvested, and wounds closed
      • bony work and reconstruction
        • modified Jobe technique
          • two connected bone tunnels made in medial epicondyle of humerus in "Y" configuration
          • single bone tunnel created by connecting two angled drill holes in ulnar sublime tubercle
            • alternatively, commercially available drill guides may be used
          • graft passed through ulnar tunnel, then graft ends through humeral tunnels
          • graft sutured to itself in figure-of-8 configuration
            • extra strands may be added if graft accommodates this
        • docking technique
          • single bony socket made in medial epicondyle
          • single bone tunnel created by connecting two angled drill holes in ulnar sublime tubercle
          • graft passed through ulnar tunnel, suture limbs passed through two bone punctures, graft shuttled into humeral socket
          • graft suture ends tied over bony bridge on medial epicondyle
        • hybrid interference-screw technique
          • docking tunnel/socket made on the humerus
          • single longitudinal bone socket made into ulna with interference-screw fixation
            • felt to decrease risk of iatrogenic fracture
        • cortical suspensory fixation, ex. "Endo-button" (Smith & Nephew) reconstruction
          • used on ulna to stabilize graft
          • more commonly used in revision setting
      • postoperative care
        • early
          • early active wrist, elbow, and shoulder range of motion
          • incorporation of shoulder girdle, core, and hip strengthening exercises
          • strengthening exercises beginning four to six weeks post-op
        • mid-term
          • initiate a progressive throwing program at four months
          • avoid valgus stress until 4 months post-op
        • return to competitive throwing at 9-12 months post-op
    • UCL repair
      • approach
        • as above
      • soft tissue
        • ulnar nerve in-situ release or transposition
        • ligament dissected and avulsion identified
      • bony work
        • ligament sutured and secured to either humerus or ulna with suture anchor
        • repair can be augmented with high-strength suture
      • postoperative care
        • similar to UCL reconstruction
  • Complications
    • Ulnar neurapraxia
      • most common, 3-26% incidence
      • treatment
        • observation as majority resolve within a few months
    • Medial antebrachial cutaneous (MABC) nerve injury
      • crosses at distal aspect of the incision
    • Fracture of ulna or medial epicondyle
      • risk factors
        • small bone bridge during tunnel placement
      • treatment
        • may require internal fixation of fracture, or switch to larger graft fixation device
    • Elbow stiffness
      • risk factors
        • heterotopic ossification
      • treatment
        • early directed therapy focusing on obtaining motion
        • HO excision around 6 months, if present
    • Inability to regain preinjury level throwing ability
      • more common following revision reconstructions
  • Prognosis
    • Formerly a career-ending injury
    • UCL reconstruction provides high rates of return to throwing and sport
      • worse outcomes following revision reconstructions
    • Outcomes and return to sport following surgical MUCL reconstruction (Tommy John surgery) depend on precise recreation of the MUCL and diligent rehabilitation.
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