Evaluating the efficacy of hinged elbow braces in reducing passive valgus forces after ulnar collateral ligament injury—A biomechanical study
2025

Effectiveness of Hinged Elbow Braces for UCL Injuries

Sample size: 8 publication Evidence: low

Author Information

Author(s): Kai Hoffeld, Christopher Wahlers, Jan P. Hockmann, Sebastian Wegmann, Nadine Ott, Kilian Wegmann, Lars Peter Müller, Michael Hackl

Primary Institution: University of Cologne

Hypothesis

A hinged elbow orthosis reduces passive valgus forces after UCL injuries.

Conclusion

The study found that while a hinged elbow brace may reduce passive valgus forces, the effect was not statistically significant.

Supporting Evidence

  • The hinged elbow brace showed a tendency to reduce passive valgus forces.
  • The study's findings are based on a biomechanical model using cadaver specimens.
  • Statistical analysis indicated no significant difference in valgus instability with the brace.

Takeaway

The study tested if a special elbow brace helps reduce forces that can hurt the elbow after an injury, but it didn't show strong proof that it works.

Methodology

Eight cadaveric elbow specimens were tested under three scenarios: intact ligaments, simulated UCL rupture, and with a hinged elbow brace after UCL rupture.

Potential Biases

The study may not accurately reflect real-life conditions due to the use of cadaver specimens.

Limitations

The small sample size and the study's focus on a fixed elbow position limit the generalizability of the findings.

Participant Demographics

Three male and five female cadaver donors, mean age 82 years.

Statistical Information

P-Value

p=0.041 and p=0.014 for specific comparisons

Confidence Interval

95% CI: 0.47–0.78 for A vs B; 95% CI: 1.42–4.13 for B vs C; 95% CI: 0.63–3.51 for A vs C

Statistical Significance

p>0.05

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1002/jeo2.70094

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