Elbow · Acute injury

Distal humerus fracture

Fracture at the bottom of the upper arm bone — complex surgery involving the elbow joint.

Cared for across all 6 OSI locations

Overview

what it is and why it matters

Distal humerus fractures occur at the articular end of the humerus, involving the medial and lateral columns and the trochlea-capitellum articular surface. They result from high-energy trauma in younger patients (falls from height, sports collisions) or from low-energy falls in osteoporotic elderly patients. They are complex to manage because the articular surface must be precisely reconstructed and the elbow is unforgiving of stiffness — requiring stable fixation that allows early motion.

Diagnosis

exam first, imaging second

Elbow pain and swelling with inability to use the arm after significant trauma. AP and lateral X-rays. CT with 3D reconstruction is essential for preoperative planning of operative cases.

Treatment Path

how care progresses at OSI
1

Non-operative management

For minimally displaced fractures in non-ambulatory patients or those with prohibitive surgical risk — a "bag of bones" technique accepting moderate malunion while focusing on early motion.

Surgical Options at OSI

if non-operative care isn't enough

Most displaced distal humerus fractures require surgical fixation to restore the articular surface and allow early motion.

Providers Who Treat Distal Humerus Fracture

sports-medicine team

Further Reading

authoritative sources

External patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:

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