Background
There are no reported series that specifically deal with repair of infected nonunions of the diaphysis of the forearm bones.
We sought to determine whether a standardized treatment protocol we have utilized for 15 patients from 1989 to 2005 results
in a high union rate, resolution of infection, and a good functional outcome.
Methods
The study cohort included nine male and six female patients who presented to a University hospital setting with an infected
nonunion of the diaphysis of the radius or ulna. Every patient had a minimum of 2-year follow-up. The average patient age
was 45 years (range 17–79). Eight of the patients had fractures involving their dominant arm. Thirteen patients had initially
fractured both the radius and ulna, but two of these patients had subsequently healed one of the bones. One patient had an
isolated radius fractures, and one patient fractured the ulna alone. All patients underwent a protocol that combines aggressive
surgical debridements as necessary, definitive fixation after 7–14 days, tricortical iliac crest bone grafting for segmental
defects, leaving wounds open to heal by secondary intention, 6 weeks of culture-specific intravenous antibiotics, and early
active range of motion (ROM) exercises. We sought to report our success rate of nonunion repair, number of re-interventions,
complication rate, final ROM, and the ability to eradicate the infection using this treatment regimen.
Results
At most recent follow-up (average 5 years, range 2–15 years), all patients had united and resolved their infections. One case
was considered a failure, although he did go on to unite a one-bone forearm and was free of infection at most recent follow-up.
All but three patients, including the one failure, had at least 50° of supination/pronation and 30–130° of flexion/extension
arc. Excluding the one failure that united his one-bone forearm at 46 months, the average time to union was 13.2 weeks (range
10–15 weeks).
Conclusions
The results of this study indicate that our standard protocol for treatment of infected nonunion of the shafts of the radius
and ulna is reliable at obtaining fracture union with a good functional result, while also resolving the infection.
Keywords Infection - Nonunion - Forearm - Diaphyseal - Radius - Ulna - Fracture - Osteomyelitis
Presented at the AAOS 68th Annual Meeting, San Fransisco, CA, USA, February 28 to March 4, 2001.