Elbow Fractures – What Patients Should Know About Broken Elbows (2024)

In this article I’ll cover some common questions about elbow fractures. Patients will elbow injuries often have the same questions about their problem – hopefully you’ll find this useful if you or someone you know has an elbow fracture.

Common Questions About Elbow Fractures

What is the elbow?

Elbows are basically hinge-type joints, like the hinge on a door.

The three bones that make up the elbow are the humerus, radius, and ulna. The humerus is the bone of the upper arm – it flares out just before it connects with the elbow joint.

The radius and ulna are smaller and sit side-by-side in the elbow joint.

Strong ligaments hold the bones together (ligaments connect bones to other bones).

Muscles and tendons surround the elbow joint and help it move. The elbow is capable of two main types of movement: bending and straightening and rotation (when you turn palm up and palm down).

Either one of these motions may be stiff or painful after a bad elbow injury.

How do elbow fractures happen?

Elbows break most commonly after a fall onto a stretched-out hand, when someone tries to break their fall. You can also break your elbow if you land directly on it, or by twisting it severely. Other injuries like sprains, strains, or dislocations can happen at the same time.

How do I know my elbow is fractured?

Sometimes it’s hard to tell if you have a bruise, a sprain, or a complete break (a fracture). Pain, bruising, and swelling around an elbow that’s hard to bend or twist can be signs of a broken elbow.

You may hear or feel a pop or crack in the elbow during the injury.

Other signs of serious injury include a crooked appearance to the elbow or arm, bleeding cuts in the skin around the elbow, or numbness/tingling in the hand after the injury that doesn’t improve.

How do elbow surgeons diagnose elbow fractures?

X-rays will show most elbow fractures. These are taken in the ER or in the elbow surgeon’s office.

Sometimes it’s necessary to get a CT scan of the elbow, and your surgeon or ER doctor might recommend this. A CT scan is a type of x-ray that looks at the elbow bones in very fine detail – much more closely than with plain x-ray.

Surgeons often get CT scans of elbows if they’re trying to figure out exactly how severe the break is, or to plan for surgery. For example, a CT will show a surgeon if the broken elbow is shattered in hundreds of pieces, or broken into a few main fragments – this will be good to know before starting surgery.

What does treatment for elbow fractures involve?

Elbow fractures are treated either with surgery or without surgery. Usually the right answer depends on how badly the elbow is broken.

  • Is the break in the joint?
  • Does the break involve multiple bones?
  • Is the fracture solid or are there loose fragments in the elbow?
  • Is a nerve or blood vessel damaged?

All these questions need to be answered during the decision process.

When splints, casts, or braces are used

If the pieces are stable and not likely to move out of place, a splint or cast may let them heal. Sometimes it’s even safe to move the elbow during the healing process to prevent stiffness.

When surgery is used

If the bones are broken in multiple places or if the break involves the joint, or the pieces are moved out of place a lot, surgery is usually the right answer.

Surgery is used to put the pieces back in the right alignment, solid enough (using metal hardware like screws and pins) to let you move the elbow after surgery (in therapy). If the bone comes through the skin, surgery is needed right away to wash out the cut and prevent infection.

How long is the recovery from an elbow fracture?

Any fracture takes about six weeks to heal. This is true whether you have surgery or just a splint.

Some factors make healing slow down, like smoking or bad circulation.

If the pieces of broken bone can be stabilized in surgery or are stable on their own, early motion and therapy can prevent stiffness, but therapy is usually required on top of the bone healing time.

Therefore count on about three months of total healing and rehabilitation time to recover from an elbow fracture.

Some patients heal faster, some slower. The most common complication after an elbow fracture (with or without surgery) is stiffness.

What Dr. Henley’s Elbow Fracture Patients Are Saying

by Leigh

I broke my right elbow while on vacation and called to make an appointment for when we got home. Was able to get an appointment with Dr. Henley right away and was so very pleased. He is very attentive and kind…started physical therapy within the week of the break. Loved the fact he was so proactive towards my recovery and because of that I was playing golf again at full speed at 10 weeks post injury!!

byAmy Glenn

I broke my left elbow in a bicycling accident in May. I was referred to Dr. Henley by the Washington Regional ER staff. His staff got me in for an apt very quickly and I had a surgery appointment a week later. Dr. Henley has a great bedside manner and makes sure you understand what the problem is and how he is going to fix it.

I turn 40 this year, and this is my 1st broken bone and being the active person I am thought this was going to be a breeze. I would waltz out of surgery…do a little therapy…and all would be better. Poor Dr. Henley…..the surgery went well but scar tissue aggressively set up in my elbow and no matter how hard I worked in therapy and at home I could not get my elbow to bend.

Two things happened at that point that I feel really turned my whole situation around….Dr Henley recommended a manipulation procedure where you go to the outpatient center they put you to sleep and he bends your arm and breaks up the scar tissue. Then my therapist Cindy (wonderful person) recommended a static progressive splint that had to be rented from an outside source. I don’t know if I would have the range of motion I have today without the combination of those 2 things. The one downside of the splint is that Blue Cross insurance did not cover it so I have to pay out of pocketapproximately95/mo but WELL WORTH IT! I was fully released yesterday and I ride much more cautiouslynow but am back on a bicycle. If anyone in my family is in need of something that Dr Henley can treat, he will definitely be my first choice.

Elbow Fractures – What Patients Should Know About Broken Elbows (2024)
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