# Anterior Capsulectomy Through Humeral Fenestration in Arthroscopic Arthrolysis for Elbow Stiffness Is Safe and Effective

**Authors:** Clémence Lemaître, Antoine Senioris, Fabrice Duparc

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.asmr.2024.101029 · Arthroscopy, Sports Medicine, and Rehabilitation · 2024-10-15

## TL;DR

This study shows that a specific arthroscopic surgery for stiff elbows improves joint movement and is safe with no nerve complications.

## Contribution

Demonstrates the safety and effectiveness of a posterior-only approach for anterior capsulectomy in elbow arthrolysis.

## Key findings

- Intraoperative and postoperative improvements in elbow flexion/extension and pronation/supination were observed.
- No neurologic complications occurred in patients undergoing the procedure.
- Mean follow-up showed significant reduction in joint motion deficits.

## Abstract

To evaluate arc of motion and complications following transhumeral anterior capsulectomy through a purely posterior approach with the Outerbridge-Kashiwagi procedure in treating elbow stiffness.

Patients who were treated for elbow stiffness between April 2003 and February 2023 were retrospectively identified. The inclusion criteria were an extension/flexion arc deficit of at least 30° and treatment with arthroscopic arthrolysis through posterior and posterolateral portals with humeral fenestration. Elbow joint range of motion and the Mayo Elbow Performance Score were assessed preoperatively, intraoperatively, at 6 weeks, and at final follow-up. The follow-up ended when the elbow became asymptomatic again or when the recovery was considered stable. Postoperative complications were recorded.

A total of 30 patients (23 men/7 women; 31 elbows; 1 bilateral/29 unilateral) were included. Mean follow-up was 11.1 months (1-64). Mean joint amplitudes intraoperatively increased in all areas of mobility, including extension/flexion from 86° to 132.6° (P = .001) and pronation/supination from 163.9° to 179.7° (P = .025). At the longest follow-up, mean joint amplitude was increased from 86° to 118.9° (P = .002) in extension/flexion and from 136.9° to 173.9° (P = .022) in pronation/supination. The mean deficit was reduced from 54° to 21.1° (P = .001) in extension/flexion and from 16.1° to 6.1° (P = .006) in pronation/supination. The mean gain in the extension/flexion arc was 31.5° and 10° for the pronation/supination arc. Loss in flexion/extension was limited (mean: 14.2°, extreme: 50°). The study showed no neurologic complications.

Arthroscopic arthrolysis of a stiff elbow using a purely posterior approach with anterior capsulectomy via the Outerbridge-Kashiwagi procedure was safe and effective. Clinical results showed improvement in joint range of motion in flexion/extension and pronation/supination, both intraoperatively and postoperatively, with no postoperative neurologic complications.

Level IV, therapeutic case series.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Elbow Stiffness (MESH:D000092464), arc deficit (MESH:D009461), stiff (MESH:C566112), neurologic complications (MESH:D002493)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11873453/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11873453