The most frequent fracture of the scapula is that of the acromion; this is usually the result of direct violence, such as a fall upon the tip of the shoulder. Detachment of this fragment permits a peculiar flattening of the shoulder, but without dislocation. The fragment can be easily felt, while the deltoid is displaced and its rounded contour lost. Treatment consists solely in forcing the arm upward, by dressings applied beneath the elbow, thus lifting the fragment into its place; fibrous union occurring here much more often than osseous, the latter is possible only in case a good apposition be maintained. Any form of dressing, then, by which the elbow is crowded upward and rest maintained will be appropriate.

The surgical neck is occasionally detached, sometimes with and sometimes without the coracoid process. As the humerus is attached to it by the capsular ligament the arm drops with the fragment when the patient is in the upright position, and the elbow will be found lower than that of the injured side. The arm is unduly mobile, and the fragment can usually be seized and crepitus obtained within the axilla. Here it is necessary to hold the arm up, as it controls the position of the fragment. It is usually sufficient to lift the elbow up and bind the arm firmly to the side, the scapula being immobilized by broad straps of adhesive plaster.

The coracoid process is occasionally detached, usually by muscular violence, i. e., it is pulled off by the coracobrachialis and the coracoid head of the biceps which arise from it. The injury is recognized by failure to detect the process in its proper place, and usually by discovery of the fragment at a point below its normal position, to which it has been drawn out by the muscles arising from it. Ligamentous union can be secured by relaxing these muscles, which is done by placing the hand over the opposite shoulder and dressing the arm firmly against the chest. I have seen paralysis of the arm result from excessive callus after fracture of the coracoid.

The spine, body, and the angles of the scapula are occasionally broken by severe violence. In the aged comminution may occur. Crepitus can be nearly always obtained. It may be necessary to distinguish the scapular fracture from one of the ribs beneath it. The treatment consists in simply fixing the shoulder-blade upon the chest, to which it is naturally adapted, by firm bandages, which shall immobilize not only it but the arm as well.

FRACTURES OF THE HUMERUS.

At the upper end of the humerus we deal with fracture of the processes, i. e., the tuberosities, which may be torn off by violent action of the muscles therein inserted; of the anatomical neck, which is rare and occurs most often in the aged; of the surgical neck, which is the most common; or, in the young, epiphyseal separation, which is the equivalent of the last named. Separation of the tuberosities is diagnosticated mainly by exclusion, possibly by x-rays. The anatomical neck lies within the capsule, and should the head be thus detached it might remain as a foreign body in the joint, having no means of securing nutrition. Fractures of the head of the bone are not classical and are usually the result of gunshot injuries or extreme violence. In all of these injuries there will be swelling, loss of function, while crepitus is sometimes obtained, but is very difficult to locate, even under an anesthetic. The diagnosis is to be made mostly by exclusion.

The surgical neck is the most frequently broken; the line of fracture passing below the tuberosities and above the muscles inserted along the bicipital groove. Therefore the pectoralis and the latissimus muscles will both conspire to pull the upper end of the shaft toward the thorax to such an extent that it can be felt in the axilla. This gives its axis a different direction, while all the muscles extending from the shoulder to the forearm will tend to produce shortening. Deformity is usually distinct, crepitus is easily obtained, and undue mobility is well marked. The head of the bone can be detected in its proper place beneath the deltoid, but does not rotate with the shaft. In rare instances a certain amount of impaction may make this evidence of fracture obscure. Epiphyseal separation will give the same signs and symptoms.

Treatment.

—The primary indication here is to overcome muscle pull by traction in a direction toward the crest of the pelvis of the same side. At the same time, with a certain degree of coaxing of the upper end of the shaft outward and a little forward, it may be possible to so re-apply broken surfaces to each other, and so affix the arm to the thorax, as to be effective. When serious difficulty, however, is encountered the writer advises traction, applied to the arm alone, if the patient be able to be upright, or to the arm and forearm, if he be confined in bed. It will take considerable stretching to overcome the combined action of all the muscles which tend to produce displacement. Along with such treatment a coaptation splint should be applied, the best being that which can be carefully molded to the parts and adapted to their needs. For this purpose a molded plaster-of-Paris splint is preferable to one of metal made to some standard size. In the dressing it is necessary to include not only the shoulder and arm but also the forearm, otherwise the principle of physiological rest would not be enforced. [Fig. 286] illustrates the common tendency to displacement in these injuries.

Fracture of the surgical neck is occasionally combined with dislocation of the head of the humerus, by which such an injury is seriously complicated. Reduction may be attempted by manipulation. Until recently it was generally advised to wait for a week or ten days, and until consolidation had occurred, and then to make the attempt at reduction; but Porter and McBurney have shown that it is advisable to cut down upon the dislocated upper fragment, and, fixing it with forceps or with an instrument shaped like a corkscrew or hook, to force it back into place again. If this be done under the strictest precautions it lends no serious features to the case, while, in most respects, such a procedure would greatly simplify it, the wound being closed with or without drainage, and the usual fracture dressing being applied.