Neurologic Complications of Distal Biceps Tendon Repair With 1-Incision Endobutton Fixation
Michael J. Carroll, MD, Mark P. DaCambra, MD, FRCSC, and Kevin A. Hildebrand, MD, FRCSC
Functional outcomes of biceps tendon rupture may be optimized with operative treatment.
We conducted a retrospective study to determine the neurologic complications of using 1-incision Endobutton fixation to repair distal biceps tendon ruptures. Patients with distal biceps tendon ruptures treated with a 1-incision technique and Endobutton fixation were included. The primary outcome measure was frequency of neurologic complications.
All 50 patients in the study were men. Mean age was 45 years. Twenty-one patients (42%) had at least 1 complication. Injury to the lateral antebrachial cutaneous nerve (LACN) was the most common (36%). Mean time to diagnosis was 17 days (range, 0 to 40 days). Posterior interosseous, anterior interosseous,
and superficial radial nerve palsies each occurred at a 4% rate. Mean follow-up was 133 days.
This study involved the largest cohort of patients with distal biceps tendon rupture repaired with Endobutton fixation using a 1-incision technique. The LACN injury rate (36%) was higher than in other studies using the same technique (0% to 22%). Injury rates for other neural structures near the elbow were comparable to those in the literature.