Nine humeral fractures occurred subsequent to 499 shoulder
arthroplasties that had been performed between December 1978 and November
1987 at the Mayo Clinic. The time from the arthroplasty to the fracture
averaged thirty-nine months (range, eight to 101 months). Seven patients
were women and two were men, and the average age was seventy years (range,
forty-five to eighty-five years). The arthroplasties were performed for
rheumatoid arthritis in five patients and for the sequelae of trauma in
four. Six patients had advanced osteopenia, and two had had an ipsilateral
total elbow arthroplasty. Six of the fractures were centered at the tip of
the prosthesis; one fracture (type A) extended proximally, and five (type
B) did not. The three remaining fractures (type C) involved the humeral
shaft distal to the implant and extended into the distal humeral
metaphysis. Four fractures healed with non-operative treatment. Two
fractures that had unacceptable alignment were treated successfully with
operative intervention. Three fractures that were treated with
immobilization in a splint failed to heal; two of those fractures
eventually united after a revision of the prosthesis and bone-grafting was
performed, and one fracture remained ununited. Radial nerve palsy developed
postoperatively in two patients, and it resolved within three months. Five
patients had poor active motion before the fracture, and two of them had
even less motion after the fracture was treated. Our experience suggests
that long oblique and spiral fractures can be successfully treated
non-operatively, provided that the skeletal alignment is
acceptable.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)