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Foot and Ankle Fractures. Dr. Dave Dyck R3 Sept. 5/02. Today’s Agenda:. Review ankle x-rays (10min) Review ankle x-ray classification (5-10min) Review various foot and ankle fractures and their treatments (30min). Case 1:.
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Foot and Ankle Fractures Dr. Dave Dyck R3 Sept. 5/02
Today’s Agenda: • Review ankle x-rays (10min) • Review ankle x-ray classification (5-10min) • Review various foot and ankle fractures and their treatments (30min)
Case 1: • 32y male with R ankle pain and inability to walk after jumping off trailer 8 feet high and landing on both feet.
Ottawa ankle rules: • Order ankle x-rays if there is pain in malleolar zone + any one of: • Inability to weight bear both immediately and in ER (4 steps) • Bony tenderness over posterior distal 6cm of either malleoli (consider sensorium, ETOH, other inj, sensation,etc.)
Ottawa ankle rules: • Sensitivity=99-100% • Specificity=40%
Ankle X-rays: • AP • Lateral • Mortise
AP x-ray: • Medial clear space < 4mm (if not consider lat talar shift and deltoid disruption) • Space between medial fibular wall and incisural surface of tibia < 5mm • Anterior tibial tubercle should overlap fibula by 6-10mm (or 42% fibular width) (syndesmotic injury)
Mortise x-ray: • Tibiofibular overlap >1mm • Tibiofibular clear space <5mm (if abnormalconsider syndesmotic inj)
Mortise x-ray: • Medial clear space <4mm and superior-medial joint space w/in 2mm of width laterally (often AP view better)
Mortise x-ray: • Talar tilt (normal -1.5 to 1.5 degrees) ie. parallel • Can normally go up to 5 degrees in stress views
Mortise x-ray: • Tibiofibular line: distal tibia and medial aspect of fibula should be continuous • articular surface of talus should be congruent with that of distal fibula
Lateral x-ray: • Tibia/fibula/talus/joint space and os trigonum
Os trigonum: • Common accessory bone (8%) of foot found just posterior to lateral tubercle of talus
Shepherd’s Fracture: • Extreme plantar flexion injury
Lauge-Hansen: • Based on position of foot prior to injury and the motion of the talus relative to the leg once force is applied • Eg supination-external rotation • Further subdivided into worsening areas of injury • USELESS!
Danis-Weber • Based on level of fibular fracture • A=below syndesmosis • B=at level of syndesmosis • C=above syndesmosis • THE MORE PROXIMAL THE FIBULAR # THE MORE SEVERE THE INJURY
AO classification: • Similar to DW scheme but adds further info based on medial malleolar involvement • ANY MEDIAL MALLEOLAR # = UNSTABLE ANKLE
Henderson scheme: • Most common • Unimalleolar vs bimalleolar vs trimalleolar
Case 2: Treatment?
Transverse type A1/avulsion # • Treat as stable ankle sprains if they are minimally displaced, <3mm in diameter, and no indication of medial ligament damage. Otherwise treat in walking cast/boot for 6-8 weeks
Isolated medial malleolar # • Rare (have high index of suspicion for other injuries) • If min displaced treat with immobilization and outpatient follow-up • r/o Maisonneuve’s fracture
Treatment: • Cast immobilization and refer to ortho for possible ORIF vs. conservative tx (only if mortise intact)
Case 3: Treatment?
Bimalleolar and trimalleolar # • Usually involve syndesmosis • Post slab and ortho referral (may try closed reduction if ++displaced and definitely if dislocation)
Tibial plafond or Pilon fracture • Due to axial load • Very unstable • Splint and refer to ortho for ORIF
Hindfoot Fractures: • Talus • Calcaneus
Talar fractures: • Rare • Poor blood supply high incidence of AVN • Can be major or minor
Major Talar fractures: • Neck, head, body (& lat process) • Talar neck fractures = 50% • Hawkins type1= non displaced + no joint inv. • Type II = displaced with subluxation or dislocation of the subtalar joint BUT ankle joint is OK • Type III = Type II +dislocation of ankle joint • Type IV = Type III + talar head dislocation
Treatment: • Type I= NWB BK casting x 8-12 weeks • Type II= closed reduction with traction + plantar flexion and BK casting vs ORIF • Type III/IV = immed. Ortho consult • Ortho should be involved in all cases
Treatment: • Talar body # = if non-displaced BK non-weight bearing cast x 6-8 weeks • Talar head # = if non-displaced BK walking cast X 6-8 weeks VS NWB • ER ortho otherwise
Minor talar fractures: • Minor avulsion fractures of neck, body, and lateral process are treated with post slab, crutches and ortho follow-up • Osteochondral fractures of talar dome NWB BK cast x3mo w ortho f/u
Case 6: 8ft fall onto both feet. R>L heel pain and can’t walk • L calcaneus x-ray:
Treatment: • Extraarticular= • 25-35% • Anterior process, tuberosity, medial process, sustenaculum tali, and body • If not displaced nor involving subtalar jt may treat with compressive dressings/casting * Intraarticular= post facet involved - well padded post splint + ortho
Calcaneal fractures: • More than 50% are associated with other extremity or spinal fractures
Midfoot Fractures: • Navicular • Cuboid • Lisfranc