 
         
         Abstract
         
         
            
Purpose
            
            The purpose of this study was to determine if the distal radius fracture pattern is
               associated with the degree of pronator quadratus (PQ) injury in distal radius fractures
               that underwent open reduction internal fixation.
            
         
         
            
Materials and Methods
            
            A retrospective review of patients with distal radius fractures who underwent open
               reduction internal fixation at a single institution through a standard volar approach
               was performed, yielding 148 patients. The extent of PQ injury was graded for each
               fracture intraoperatively (type 1: intact PQ with no visible muscle damage, type 2:
               transverse tear through the muscle at the level of the fracture site, and type 3:
               muscle damage and tears in multiple planes). The fractures were classified according
               to the Orthopaedic Trauma Association (OTA) classification of distal radius fractures.
               Thirty-seven patients with an intact PQ (type 1) were compared with 111 patients with
               an injured PQ (types 2 and 3).
            
         
         
            
Results
            
            Partial-articular fractures were associated with less severe PQ injury (type 1 PQ
               injury: partial-articular 50.0%, extra-articular 25.0%, complete-articular 21.3%,
               p = 0.040). Volar fracture angulation was protective for PQ injury (type 1 PQ injury:
               volar 50.0% vs. dorsal 17.0%, p = 0.0001). In dorsally displaced fractures, increased dorsal translation was associated
               with more severe PQ injury (type 1 PQ injury: 3.9 ± 2.9 mm, type 2 PQ injury: 6.5 ± 4.7 mm,
               p = 0.006). Age, sex, dorsal tilt, and mechanism of injury were not associated with
               PQ injury severity.
            
         
         
            
Conclusion
            
            Distal radius fracture angulation, OTA fracture classification, and millimeters of
               dorsal translation correlate with the degree of PQ injury.
            
         
         
            
Level of Evidence
            
            Level IV.
            
         
         Keywords
pronator quadratus injury - distal radius fracture - distal radius fracture classification
            - pronator quadratus injury repair