Humeral Shaft Stress Fracture Completion in a Weight Lifter: A Case Report

Allen C. Zhu, Cody Lee, Jason Strelzow, Mary Kate Erdman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Case:A 34-year-old man, amateur weight lifter presented with acute worsening of right shoulder pain after 5 months of prodromal, progressive, atraumatic pain. Imaging showed a short oblique proximal third humeral shaft fracture without evidence of other osseous abnormalities. He was treated operatively with open reduction and internal fixation, healed uneventfully, and returned to weight lifting within 3 months.Conclusion:Humeral shaft stress fractures most commonly occur in athletes or military personnel who engage in repetitive overhead activity. It is important to include stress fracture on the differential diagnosis for chronic pain in the upper extremity, especially in a physically active patient.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere24.00210
JournalJBJS case connector
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 16 2025

Keywords

  • ORIF
  • humeral shaft fracture
  • male
  • proximal humerus
  • stress fracture
  • trauma
  • weight lifting
  • young adult

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