USF-LVHN SELECT
Biomechanical Evaluation of Various Screw Constructs for Proximal Phalanx Base Fracture Fixation.
Publication/Presentation Date
5-1-2026
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the biomechanical properties of four fixation methods for proximal phalanx base fractures, single antegrade cannulated screw (control), V-pattern, Y-pattern, and K-wire configurations, using a matched pair cadaveric model.
METHODS: Forty-eight fingers (index through little) from six matched cadaveric hand pairs were included. A standardized transverse base fracture was created in the proximal phalanx. One side of each pair received a single antegrade cannulated screw. Contralateral digits were treated with either a V-pattern (group 1), Y-pattern (group 2), or K-wire configuration (group 3). Specimens underwent 3-point bending, rotational testing, and cantilever bending to failure using a hydraulic test frame. Key metrics included bending stiffness, torsional stiffness, axial displacement, and peak load to failure.
RESULTS: The V-pattern demonstrated considerably higher bending stiffness, reduced displacement, greater rotational stiffness, and higher torque resistance compared to controls. While failure displacement was similar, the V-pattern required considerably higher force to fail and showed greater stiffness. The Y-pattern showed no notable differences in bending stiffness or displacement versus controls. However, it had considerably lower rotational stiffness and torque resistance. No differences in failure load, stiffness, or displacement were noted. The K-wire showed considerably lower bending stiffness and higher displacement compared to controls. Rotational metrics and failure parameters showed no notable differences.
CONCLUSIONS: Among the configurations tested, the V-pattern demonstrated superior biomechanical stability across bending, torsional, and failure testing compared to single antegrade cannulated screw and dual K-wire supporting our hypothesis. These findings support further investigation into its clinical application for improved fixation in proximal phalanx base fractures. Moreover, the addition of a smaller screw to make the Y-pattern did not add considerable strength.
TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Diagnostic IV.
Volume
8
Issue
3
First Page
100954
Last Page
100954
ISSN
2589-5141
Published In/Presented At
McArthur, M., Diaz, M. A., Cardona, H., Dent, C., Daniel, M., Doarn, M. C., & Collins, D. W. (2026). Biomechanical Evaluation of Various Screw Constructs for Proximal Phalanx Base Fracture Fixation. Journal of hand surgery global online, 8(3), 100954. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhsg.2026.100954
Disciplines
Medical Education | Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
41948121
Department(s)
USF-LVHN SELECT Program, USF-LVHN SELECT Program Students
Document Type
Article