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Scientific article| Volume 34, ISSUE 3, P401-408, March 2009

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In Vivo Length Changes of Selected Carpal Ligaments During Wrist Radioulnar Deviation

  • Jing Xu
    Affiliations
    Department of Hand Surgery, Hand Surgery Research Center, Affiliated Hospital of Nantong University, Nantong, Jiangsu, China
    Search for articles by this author
  • Jin Bo Tang
    Correspondence
    Corresponding author: Jin Bo Tang, MD, Department of Hand Surgery, Affiliated Hospital of Nantong University, 20 West Temple Road, Nantong 226001, Jiangsu, China
    Affiliations
    Department of Hand Surgery, Hand Surgery Research Center, Affiliated Hospital of Nantong University, Nantong, Jiangsu, China
    Search for articles by this author

      Purpose

      To investigate changes in the lengths of selected carpal ligaments during wrist radioulnar deviation in vivo.

      Methods

      We studied in vivo changes in the lengths of fibers of 5 palmar and dorsal intracapsular ligaments of the wrist during radioulnar deviation in 6 wrists of healthy volunteers using a noninvasive approach. Using serial computed tomography scans and volume registration techniques, the carpal kinematics were examined at 4 positions, from 40° ulnar deviation to 20° radial deviation, in 20° increments. The 3-dimensional structures of the carpal bones, distal radius and ulna, and metacarpal bones were reconstructed using customized software. We modeled the paths of fibers of 5 palmar and dorsal carpal ligaments: radioscaphocapitate (RSC), long radiolunate (LRL), ulnocapitate (UC), dorsal intercarpal (DIC), and dorsal radiocarpal (DRC) ligaments. We analyzed changes in the lengths of these ligaments during wrist radioulnar deviation.

      Results

      During wrist ulnar deviation, the RSC, LRL, and DIC ligaments lengthened significantly. During radial deviation, the UC and DRC ligaments lengthened significantly. Compared with their lengths at the neutral position of the carpus, the LRL ligament showed the greatest elongation rate at wrist ulnar deviation, and the DRC ligament showed the greatest elongation rate at wrist radial deviation among the 5 ligaments studied.

      Conclusions

      Among ligaments measured, the RSC, LRL, and DIC ligaments are tensed during wrist ulnar deviation. The UC and DRC ligaments are tensed during wrist radial deviation. Results of this in vivo study suggest that radial or ulnar deviation may predispose some carpal ligaments to excessive tensile load. The finding that the ligaments undergo different elongation rates during wrist motion may also indicate their roles in maintaining normal wrist kinematics.

      Key words

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