Elbow Injuries
Basics
Description
Bony Injuries
- Radial head fractures, coronoid process fractures, olecranon fractures, distal humerus fractures
- Monteggia and Galeazzi covered separately in forearm fractures
- Supracondylar fracture:
- Most common in children
- Peak ages 5–10 yr, rarely occurs >15 yr
- Extension type (98%): Fall on outstretched hand (FOOSH) with fully extended or hyperextended arm:
- Type 1: Minimal or no displacement
- Type 2: Slightly displaced fracture; posterior cortex intact
- Type 3: Totally displaced fracture; posterior cortex broken
- Flexion type: Blow directly to flexed elbow:
- Type 1: Minimal or no displacement
- Type 2: Slightly displaced fracture; anterior cortex intact
- Type 3: Totally displaced fracture; anterior cortex broken
- Radial head fracture:
- Usually indirect mechanism (eg, FOOSH)
- Radial head driven into capitellum
- Ulnar coronoid process fracture:
- Provides critical stability to elbow as part of ulnohumeral joint
- Fractures result in instability
- Most commonly occur in association with other injuries such as elbow dislocations
- The terrible triad:
- Radial head fracture, coronoid process fracture, and elbow dislocation
- Difficult to treat and has generally poor outcomes
Soft Tissue Injuries
- Distal biceps and triceps tendon rupture
- Less common than proximal ruptures
- Typically men in 4th decade onward
- Elbow dislocation:
- 2nd only to shoulder as most dislocated joint
- Most are posterior (90%)
- Medial/lateral epicondylitis:
- Overuse injuries usually related to rotary motion at elbow
- Involving attachment points of hand and wrist flexor/extensor groups to elbow
- Plumbers, carpenters, tennis players, golfers
- Pain made worse by resisted contraction of particular muscle groups
Pediatric Considerations
- Subluxed radial head (nursemaid’s elbow)
- 20% of all upper extremity injuries in children
- Peak age 1–4 yr; occurs more frequently in females than males
- Sudden longitudinal pull on forearm with forearm pronated
- More often left arm due to high prevalence of right-hand dominance in caregivers grabbing child’s left hand
- Recurrence occurs in about 25%
Etiology
- Mechanism aids in determining expected injury
- Trauma predominates
- Most elbow injuries caused by indirect trauma are transmitted through bones of forearm (eg, FOOSH)
- Direct blows account for few fractures or dislocations
There's more to see -- the rest of this topic is available only to subscribers.
Citation
Schaider, Jeffrey J., et al., editors. "Elbow Injuries." 5-Minute Emergency Consult, 7th ed., Wolters Kluwer, 2027. Emergency Central, emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307312/3.0.0/Elbow_Injuries_.
Elbow Injuries. In: Schaider JJJ, Barkin RMR, Hayden SRS, et al, eds. 5-Minute Emergency Consult. Wolters Kluwer; 2027. https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307312/3.0.0/Elbow_Injuries_. Accessed June 19, 2026.
Elbow Injuries. (2027). In Schaider, J. J., Barkin, R. M., Hayden, S. R., Wolfe, R. E., Barkin, A. Z., Shayne, P., & Rosen, P. (Eds.), 5-Minute Emergency Consult (7th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307312/3.0.0/Elbow_Injuries_
Elbow Injuries [Internet]. In: Schaider JJJ, Barkin RMR, Hayden SRS, et al, eds. 5-Minute Emergency Consult. Wolters Kluwer; 2027. [cited 2026 June 19]. Available from: https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307312/3.0.0/Elbow_Injuries_.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - ELEC
T1 - Elbow Injuries
ID - 307312
ED - Barkin,Adam Z,
ED - Shayne,Philip,
ED - Rosen,Peter,
ED - Schaider,Jeffrey J,
ED - Barkin,Roger M,
ED - Hayden,Stephen R,
ED - Wolfe,Richard E,
BT - 5-Minute Emergency Consult
UR - https://emergency.unboundmedicine.com/emergency/view/5-Minute_Emergency_Consult/307312/3.0.0/Elbow_Injuries_
PB - Wolters Kluwer
ET - 7
DB - Emergency Central
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -

5-Minute Emergency Consult

