Journal article
Pediatric and Adolescent Clavicle Fractures: To Fix or Not to Fix?
Instructional course lectures, v 75, p571
01 Jan 2026
PMID: 41289478
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Abstract
Middiaphyseal clavicle fractures are prevalent in children and adolescents, and they are typically treated nonsurgically because of their strong bone-healing capabilities. However, increasing trends toward surgical intervention in adult patients have sparked debate over whether younger populations could experience similar benefits from the surgical approach. Recent studies have suggested that surgical fixation may offer quicker pain relief and faster recovery, particularly in adolescents and specific fracture cases involving severe displacement or complications. However, despite these potential short-term benefits, there are no long-term differences in patient-reported function and satisfaction between surgical and nonsurgical treatment. The decision to perform surgery should be individualized, balancing potential complications against possible improvements in early recovery. Ultimately, nonsurgical management remains the standard, with surgical intervention reserved for select cases and determined collaboratively between families and health care clinicians.Middiaphyseal clavicle fractures are prevalent in children and adolescents, and they are typically treated nonsurgically because of their strong bone-healing capabilities. However, increasing trends toward surgical intervention in adult patients have sparked debate over whether younger populations could experience similar benefits from the surgical approach. Recent studies have suggested that surgical fixation may offer quicker pain relief and faster recovery, particularly in adolescents and specific fracture cases involving severe displacement or complications. However, despite these potential short-term benefits, there are no long-term differences in patient-reported function and satisfaction between surgical and nonsurgical treatment. The decision to perform surgery should be individualized, balancing potential complications against possible improvements in early recovery. Ultimately, nonsurgical management remains the standard, with surgical intervention reserved for select cases and determined collaboratively between families and health care clinicians.
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Details
- Title
- Pediatric and Adolescent Clavicle Fractures: To Fix or Not to Fix?
- Creators
- Ahmed M AbbasJoshua M AbzugAlexandra Miller DunhamMatthew StepanovichSara RuzziMartin J Herman
- Publication Details
- Instructional course lectures, v 75, p571
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Pediatrics; Orthopedic/Orthopaedic Surgery
- Other Identifier
- 991022135638004721