TY - JOUR ID - 10307 TI - The Stabilising Effect of the Anterior Oblique Ligament to Prevent Directional Subluxation at the Trapeziometacarpal Joint of the Thumb: A Biomechanical Cadaveric Study JO - The Archives of Bone and Joint Surgery JA - ABJS LA - en SN - 2345-4644 AU - McCann, Mark R. AU - Rust, Philippa A. AU - Wallace, Robert AD - Department of Anatomy, Edinburgh University Medical School, UK AD - Hand Surgery Unit, St John’s Hospital, Livingston, UK AD - Department of Orthopaedics, University of Edinburgh, UK Y1 - 2018 PY - 2018 VL - 6 IS - 2 SP - 105 EP - 111 KW - Anterior oblique ligament KW - Biomechanical testing KW - Thumb KW - Trapeziometacarpal joint KW - Stability KW - Subluxation DO - 10.22038/abjs.2017.20758.1557 N2 - Background: The trapeziometacarpal joint (TMCJ) is inherently unstable, relying on ligament restraint to preventsubluxation. Subluxation of the thumb in a dorsoradial direction is often observed in clinical practice, either after acuteligament injury or more commonly with osteoarthritis (OA). This subluxation follows loss of function of trapeziometacarpalligaments that stabilise this joint, resisting the deforming force of abductor pollicis longus (APL). The exact ligamentsthat stabilise and prevent the thumb from the pull of APL causing dorsoradial subluxation remain unknown, although theanterior oblique ligament (AOL) has been implicated. The aim of this study was to measure the direction of subluxationresisted by the AOL.Methods: In this study we used cadaveric limbs and custom made biomechanical testing to measure the influence AOLhas in stabilising the thumb against subluxation in three planes: radial, dorsal and dorsoradial. Three fresh frozen handswere dissected to expose the TMCJ, leaving all ligaments, capsule and APL attachment in place. The force requiredto create a displacement of 5mm between the first metacarpal and the trapezium in these three planes was measuredbefore and after AOL division.Results: The average force to displace in the dorsoradial plane prior to division was 6.68N, and a statistically significantreduction to 1.15N (P<0.001) was found after division of the AOL. A statistically significant increase in force (P<0.001)from 2.89N to 4.04N was seen in the radial plane, while no change was seen dorsally (P=0.98), with average forces of2.74N and 2.62N found pre and post division.Conclusion: There is clinical significance in reporting quantifiable data in this field, as subluxation of the thumb is oftenseen with OA. The results of our study provide support for surgical reconstruction of the AOL as the primary surgicalstabilizer against dorsoradial subluxation of the thumb. UR - https://abjs.mums.ac.ir/article_10307.html L1 - https://abjs.mums.ac.ir/article_10307_d0c013d0c18656c4cad271fdd464c3be.pdf ER -