Short Communication Volume 7 Issue 4
1Elbow Shoulder Research Centre, University of Kentucky, Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, USA
2Dunbar High School, USA
Correspondence: Srinath Kamineni, Elbow Shoulder Research Centre, University of Kentucky, Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Lexington KY USA
Received: February 11, 2017 | Published: February 28, 2017
Citation: Kamineni S, Kamineni AV (2017) The Nomenclature of Total Elbow Arthroplasty. MOJ Orthop Rheumatol 7(4): 00281. DOI: 10.15406/mojor.2017.07.00281
Total elbow arthroplasty is an increasingly common treatment option for unreconstructable distal humeral fractures in the elderly, with a concurrent increase in the associated literature. When attempting to assess the data published in the English. Language, it is apparent that the terminology used to describe total elbow arthroplasty/replacements is inconsistent, which in turn makes direct comparisons of certain design concepts difficult. We attempt to analyse the terminology used in the literature, and suggest an algorithmic form of description.
We retrieved 192 published English language articles which incorporated elbow arthroplasty/replacement as a primary title or as keywords/mesh words, over a 10 year period, Figure 1+2. Each article was reviewed for descriptive terminology specifically relating to the elbow prosthesis. The terms were then referenced with the Oxford English and the Merriam-Webster engineering dictionaries. The results were grouped according to the descriptive term and the implant being described.
The descriptive terms found are listed below along with their dictionary definitions (Figures 1 & 2).
Definitions of constraint
Oxford English Dictionary: A limitation or restriction
Merriam-Webster Engineering Dictionary - Control that limits or restricts actions. The literature uses such terms as “constrained” or “hinged” with little rigor, since both terms have specific definitions and mechanical behavior. Constraint is the limitation of a behavior and in the description of an arthroplasty refers to a structural property that limits the implant’s potential for dislocation. Therefore, using the term semiconstrained, unconstrained and constrained has a little real value. A constrained implant would imply a totally rigid connection between the two components, and unconstrained implant would imply there is no resistance to dislocation, and a semiconstrained implant is anything in-between these two extremes. Hence, other than implied mechanical behavior, these terms do not add value from a quantitative sense, and should not be used. The term hinged, rigidly hinged, and sloppy hinge, equally do not add significant value. The only terms that truly added values are linked and unlinked, since they describe a mechanical connection between the two components without implying mechanical behavior. The desire to impart mechanical information, while understandable, is fraught with confusion, especially when trying to compare implants to each other. Terms such as coupled versus uncoupled are intuitive. We recommend only the term linked versus unlinked, as depicted in Figure 3+4, when describing such implants and the term unconstrained not be used at all, since there is no implant that is truly unconstrained (Figures 3 & 4).
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