In this paper we document seventy fractures of the humeral shaft that
were treated by intramedullary fixation between 1970 and 1981.
Complications developed in forty-seven (67 per cent) of the fractures, and
forty-five (64 per cent) required at least one additional operative
procedure. Of the sixty fractures that were internally fixed within six
weeks after injury, nine (15 per cent) had a delayed union and five (8.3
per cent) had a non-union, two of which persisted despite subsequent
surgery. Three of the ten fractures that were internally fixed more than
six weeks after injury never united despite additional procedures that were
done to secure union. Delayed union and non-union were more common in open
fractures (33 per cent) than in closed fractures (21 per cent), and with
open reduction (39 per cent) than with closed or so-called semi-open
reduction (9 per cent). Deep infection occurred in three (5 per cent) of
the fractures and was more common in open (17 per cent) than in closed
fractures (2 per cent). One of the three open fractures that were treated
by immediate fixation became infected, as compared with only one of the
nine open fractures treated by delayed fixation. Painful adhesive
capsulitis of the shoulder developed in thirty-four (56 per cent) of the
patients who had fractures treated with distally directed pins, but motion
of the elbow was not restricted in the nine patients with fractures treated
with proximally directed pins.