Introduction.
Introduction.
Lisfranc injury is named after Jacques Lisfranc, a field surgeon in Napoleon’s army. Based on Columnar classification of Lisfranc fracture dislocation, study of injury to
Progressive collapsing foot deformity (PCFD) is a complex foot deformity with varying degrees of hindfoot valgus, forefoot abduction, forefoot varus, and collapse or hypermobility of the
Background. Research on midfoot injuries have primarily concentrated on the central column and the Lisfranc ligament without amassing evidence on lateral column injuries. Lateral column injuries have historically been treated with Kirschner wire fixation when encountered. Objective. Our aim in this study was to analyse lateral column injuries to the midfoot, their method of treatment and the radiological lateral column outcomes. Our nul hypothesis being that fixation is required to obtain and maintain lateral column alignment. Methods. Data was retrospectively collected from four centres on surgically treated midfoot fracture dislocations between 2011 and 2021. Radiographs were analysed using departmental PACS. All statistics was performed using SPSS 26. Results. A total of 235 cases were diagnosed as having a lateral column injury out of the 409 cases included. On cross tabulation, there was a significant association with having a central column injury (234/235, p<.001) and 70% of cases (166/235) also had an additional
Aim. The aim of this paper is to analyse the cause of neuropathic diabetic foot ulcers and discuss their preventive measures. Methods. Review of patients with foot ulcers managed in our diabetic MDT clinics since Feb 2018 were analysed. Based on this observation and review of pertinent literature, following observations were made. Results. Forefoot. Progressive hindfoot equinus from contraction of gastroc-soleus-tendo-Achilles complex, with additional contraction of tibialis posterior and peroneal longus muscles and, progressive plantar flexed metatarsal heads secondary to claw toe deformity results in increased forefoot plantar pressures. In patients with insensate feet, this result in ulcer formation under the metatarsal heads from shear stress when walking. Callosity under the metatarsal heads is the earliest clinical sign. Most patients by this time have fixed tightness of the muscle groups as assessed by negative Silfverskiold test. Percutaneous tendo-Achilles lengthening (TAL) has shown to reduce the mid-forefoot plantar pressures by 32% and ulcer healing in 96% of patients within 10 weeks (± 4 weeks). Additional z-lengthening of peroneal longus and tibialis posterior tendons helped in patients with big-toe and 5. th. metatarsal head ulcers. Proximal metatarsal osteotomies further reduce the forefoot pressures to near normality. Midfoot. Midfoot ulcers are secondary to rocker-bottom deformity a consequence of Charcot neuroarthropathy (CN). Hindfoot equinus as described and relative osteopenia from neurally mediated increased blood flow (neurovascular theory) and repeated micro-trauma (neurotraumatic theory) result in failure of
Introduction. Comminuted mid-foot fractures are uncommon. Maintenance of the length and alignment of the
Aims. Tibial plateau fractures (TPFs) are complex injuries around the knee caused by high- or low-energy trauma. In the present study, we aimed to define the distribution and frequency of TPF lines using a 3D mapping technique and analyze the rationalization of divisions employed by frequently used classifications. Methods. In total, 759 adult patients with 766 affected knees were retrospectively reviewed. The TPF fragments on CT were multiplanar reconstructed, and virtually reduced to match a 3D model of the proximal tibia. 3D heat mapping was subsequently created by graphically superimposing all fracture lines onto a tibia template. Results. The cohort included 405 (53.4%) cases with left knee injuries, 347 (45.7%) cases with right knee injuries, and seven (0.9%) cases with bilateral injuries. On mapping, the hot zones of the fracture lines were mainly concentrated around the anterior cruciate ligament insertion, posterior cruciate ligament insertion, and the inner part of the lateral condyle that extended to the junctional zone between Gerdy’s tubercle and the tibial tubercle. Moreover, the cold zones were scattered in the posteromedial fragment, superior tibiofibular syndesmosis, Gerdy’s tubercle, and tibial tubercle. TPFs with different Orthopaedic Trauma Association/AO Foundation (OTA/AO) subtypes showed peculiar characteristics. Conclusion. TPFs occurred more frequently in the lateral and intermedial column than in the
Introduction. Locking plates can provide greater stability than conventional plates; however, reports revealed that fractures had a high incidence of failure without
Most of the controversy surrounding management of the adult acquired flatfoot deformity revolves around the correction of Stage 2 deformity. Stage 1 deformity, uncommonly corrected surgically, involves tenosynovitis with preservation of tendon length and absence of structural deformity. Attempts at tenosynovectomy in light of structural deformity leads to operative failure, found in 10% of Teasdall and Johnson's 1992 patient population. Thus, with tenosynovectomy rarely becoming an operative situation, Stage 2 deformity becomes the mainstay of operative treatment of the adult flatfoot. Stage 2 deformity patients present with swelling medially, the inability to do a single heel raise, with a passively correctable subtalar joint. The tendon is functionally torn. In recent years, authors have subdivided Stage 2 deformity even further into A and B subcategories, where A involves less than 50% uncovering of the talonavicular joint, and B patients more than 50%. Recently, Anderson has added a C subtype, which may be applied to either A and B patients, in patients who have forefoot varus. Thus, Stage 2 patients suffer from pain that begins medially and progresses to the subfibular region over time. Most important, recognition of the continued sub classification in Stage 2 disease echoes the fact that this disorder is on a continuum, challenging the surgeon to recognize subtleties that, if unrecognized, lead to a poor patient outcome. The mainstay of treatment in Stage 2 disease is the medial slide calcaneal osteotomy, which realigns the hindfoot axis reducing valgus, improves the medial arch, protects the FDL tendon transfer, and allows the Achilles tendon to become a strong inverter. Over shift of the calcaneus can compromise the outcome, as will a lack of recognition of the congenital subtleties such that a valgus hindfoot can have a varus orientation to the calcaneus, both leading to lateral overload. A pure medial slide of a calcaneus that has a varus orientation does not correct deformity, rather, it creates it. Thus, an axial calcaneal view must be studied carefully, for a varus orientation may be corrected via a closing wedge osteotomy commensurate with the medial shift of the tuberosity. As noted above, the flexor digitorum longus tendon transfer is the staple procedure to replace the damaged posterior tibial tendon. This transfer balances the eversion power of the peroneal tendons, works in phase with the former posterior tibial tendon in the stance phase of gait, and replaces a painful diseased posterior tibial tendon. However, over tensioning the transfer results in a tenodesis rather than a functional tendon transfer, the relative weakness of the FDL tendon (30% as strong as the PTT) creates difficulty with heel raise, and inappropriate transfer to distal tarsal bones may compromise the result by limiting torque from the transferred tendon. Preservation of the posterior tibial tendon in combination with the transferred FDL tendon remains a consideration without answer, though Rosenfeld (2005) suggests a substantial improvement in strength through PTT preservation. Failure of the above protocol for treating Stage 2 disease most often revolves around the insufficient corrective power of the tandem procedures in longstanding ruptures. According to Guyton (2001), only 50% of patients report a perception in deformity improvement following FDL/calcaneal osteotomy procedures, and only 4% report a significant improvement in pre-existing deformity. Sangeorzan (2001) found such patients could not achieve a painless plantigrade foot due to acquired ligament laxity (primarily the Spring Ligament). Sangeorzan applied Evans' pediatric procedure to adults without confirming the pathomechanics of correction. Some speculate the windlass effect on the plantar fascia creates correction (refuted by Horton, 1998, finding the plantar fascia is loosened by a lateral column lengthening), others believe tightening the peroneus longus through lateral column lengthening increases first ray plantarflexion, restoring the medial arch. Controversy also remains in answering Cooper's (1997) claim that lengthening through the calcaneus creates static increase in pressure about the calcaneocuboid joint (1.4mPa total) that may lead to an arthritic joint long term. Painful lateral overload following lateral column lengthening remains difficult problem to both prevent and correct. This last point leads to some focusing their efforts on restoration of the
The standard treatment of arthrosis of the ankle joint is arthrodesis while new prosthesis leed to good clinical results. Currently there is much controversial discussion, and knowledge of the fundamentals of biomechanics is becoming ever more important. Ten macroscopically and roentgenographically normal foot specimens were tested comparing tibio-talar arthodesis vs. nativ situation on a kinematic gait simulator. The stance- phase of normal walking gait was simulated from heel-contact to toe-off. Ground reaction forces were simulated by a tilting angle- and force-controlled translation stage upon which a pressure measuring platform was mounted. Force was applied to the tendons of the foot flexor and extensor muscle groups by cables attached to an additional set of six force-controlled hydraulic cylinders. Tibial rotation was produced by an electrical servo motor. The change after arthrodesis was a varying degree of relocation of average force and maximum pressure from the lateral onto the
Severe femoral head deformities due to Perthes' disease are characterized by limitation of ROM, pain, and early degeneration, eventually becoming intolerable already in early adulthood. Morphological adaptation of the acetabulum is substantial and complex intra- and extraarticular impingement sometimes combined with instability are the underlying pathologies. Improvement is difficult to achieve with classic femoral and acetabular osteotomies. Since 15 years we have executed a head size reduction. With an experience of more than 50 cases no AVN of the femoral head was recorded. In two hips fracture of the
Introduction:. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the specific radiographic effects that the Cotton osteotomy confers when used in combination with other reconstructive procedures in the management of the flexible flat foot deformity. Methods:. Between 2002–2013, 198 Cotton osteotomies were retrospectively identified following IRB approval. 131 were excluded on the basis of ipsilateral mid/hindfoot arthrodesis, inadequate radiographs or being less than 18yrs old at time of surgery. Parameters including the articular surface angles of the hindfoot/forefoot, Meary's angle and a newly defined Medial Arch Sag Angle (MASA) were recorded. A matched group of patients who did not undergo a Cotton osteotomy but who underwent similar hindfoot reconstructive procedures served as historic controls. Results:. 67 Cotton osteotomies in 59 patients with a mean age of 45 years (range, 18–80) were evaluated. Concomitant procedures included combinations of tibialis posterior tendon (PTT) reconstruction, Evans lateral
Posterior tibial tendon dysfunction is a well-recognised condition. It commonly occurs in middle aged overweight women. In contrast to most tendon pathology, the tendon is still often intact and the tendon is stretched rather than completely ruptured. The diagnosis can be made on clinical grounds. Clinical features include acquired flatfoot deformity, inability to perform a single heel raise, ‘too many toes’ sign and loss of inversion power with the foot in forced plantarflexion. Disease is staged into four stages, Stage II is the most common presentation. Treatment options for Stage I are non-operatively including rest and antiinflammatories. Surgical treatment for this is required if this fails or progresses to next stage. Treatment for Stage II disease is most commonly a tendon transfer using FDL tendon transfer and some bony procedure, most commonly calcaneal osteotomy. More recently move to sub-classify Stage II into sub-classification depending on severity of hindfoot valgus and presence of fixed forefoot varus. Other treatment options for Stage II include lateral column lengthening or
Purpose. Locking plates are widely used in clinical practice for the surgical treatment of complex proximal humerus fractures, especially in osteoporotic bone. The aim of this study is to assess the biomechanical influence of the infero-medial locking screws on maintaining reduction of the fragments in a proximal humerus fracture. Materials & Methods. A standard 3-part proximal humerus fracture was created in fourth generation humerus saw bones. Each specimen was anatomically reduced and secured with a PHILOS locking plate. Eleven of the specimens had infero-medial locking screws inserted, and 11 specimens did not. Each humerus sawbone underwent cyclical loading at 532N, as previous studies showed this was the maximum force at the glenohumeral joint. The absolute inter-fragmentary motion was recorded using an infra-red motion analysis device. Each specimen was then loaded to failure. Results. The fixation of a 3-part proximal humerus fracture with the insertion of the infero-medial locking screws had significantly less inter-fragmentary motion at 250, 500, 750 and 1000 cycles, when compared to a similar fracture pattern without this strategically placed screw (P< 0.001). In both groups at each 250 cycle increment there was a significant increase in the overall fracture fragment movement (P< 0.01). The load to failure in the group with the infero-medial screws was also significantly more (P< 0.001). The median load of 1159N was required for construct failure compared to 1452N in the group without the inferomedial screws. Conclusion. This study supports the importance of anatomical reduction and adequate support of the
The aims of this study were (1) to assess whether rotational stability testing in Gartland III supracondylar fractures can be used intra-operatively in order to assess fracture stability following fixation with lateral-entry wires and (2) to quantify the incidence of rotational instability following lateral-entry wire fixation in Gartland type III supracondylar humeral fractures in children. Twenty-one consecutive patients admitted with Grade III supracondylar fractures at the Children's Hospital at Westmead were surgically treated according to a predetermined protocol. Following closed fracture reduction, 2 lateral-entry wires were inserted under radiographic control. Stability was then assessed by comparing lateral x-ray images in internal and external rotation. If the fracture was found to be rotationally unstable by the operating surgeon, a third lateral-entry wire was inserted and images repeated. A medial wire was used only if instability was demonstrated after the insertion of three lateral wires. Rotational stability was achieved with two lateral-entry wires in 6 cases, three lateral-entry wires in 10 cases and with an additional medial wire in 5 cases. Our results were compared to a control group of 24 patients treated at our hospital prior to introduction of this protocol. No patients returned to theatre following introduction of our protocol as opposed to 6 patients in the control group. On analysis of radiographs, the protocol resulted in significantly less fracture position loss as evidenced by change in Baumann's angle (p<0.05) and lateral rotational percentage (p<0.05). We conclude that the introduction of rotational stability testing allows intra-operative assessment of fracture fixation. Supracondylar fractures that are rotationally stable intra-operatively following wire fixation are unlikely to displace post-operatively. Only a small proportion (26%) of these fractures were rotationally stable with 2 lateral-entry wires. This may be a reflection of either the fracture configuration or inability to adequately engage the
Ankle arthroplasty with custom-made talar component is used to avoid talar subsidence, one of the most common causes of ankle prosthesis failure. We have used Agility ankle system with custom-made talar component to treat young patients with postraumatic arthritis, revision arthroplasty and takedown ankle arthrodesis. Ankle substitution was indicated in young patients who refused arthrodesis and understood that revision or additional surgery would be inevitable in the future. Twelve cases were revised with a minimum of nine months of follow-up, females, 2; males, 10; average age, 42 years. Primary replacements were performed in 9 patients, takedown fusion in 2 and revision arthroplasty in 1. Other additional procedures as subtalar fusion (8 cases), calcaneal osteotomies (6),
First described in 1910, Legg Calve Perthes disease is considered to be a complication of osteonecrosis of the femoral head-affecting children between the ages of 2 and 12. Treatment has centred on containment, surgical and non-surgical in the hope that keeping the femoral head covered by acetabulum that it will remodel and maintain congruency with the acetabulum. We know from previous studies that deformities of the femoral head increase the risk of development of arthritis in later life and that the shape of the femoral head is the only alterable parameter in the development of this early onset arthritis. During the natural history of the disease, once the central part of the femoral head collapses the integrity of the femoral head is reliant on the support of the lateral and
The causes of a stiff elbow are numerous including: post-traumatic elbow, burns, head injury, osteoarthritis, inflammatory joint disease and congenital. Types of stiffness include: loss of elbow flexion, loss of elbow extension and loss of forearm rotation. All three have different prognoses in terms of the timing of surgery and the likelihood of restoration of function. Contractures can be classified into extrinsic and intrinsic (all intrinsic develop some extrinsic component). Functional impairment can be assessed medicolegally; however, in clinical practice the patient puts an individual value on the arc of motion. Objectively most functions can be undertaken with an arc of 30 to 130 degrees. The commonest cause of a Post-traumatic Stiff elbow is a radial head fracture or a complex fracture dislocation. Risk factors for stiffness include length of immobilisation, associated fracture with dislocation, intra-articular derangement, delayed surgical treatment, associated head injury, heterotopic ossification. Early restoration of bony columns and joint stability to allow early mobilisation reduces incidence of joint stiffness. Heterotopic ossification (HO) is common in fracture dislocation of the elbow. Neural Axis trauma alone causes HO in elbows in 5%. However, combined neural trauma and elbow trauma the incidence is 89%. Stiffness due to thermal injury is usually related to the degree rather than the site. The majority of patients have greater than 20% total body area involved. Extrinsic contractures are usually managed with a sequential release of soft tissues commencing with a capsular excision (retaining LCL/MCL), posterior bundle of the MCL +/− ulna nerve decompression (if there is loss of flexion to 100 degrees). This reliably achieved via a posterior incision, a lateral column exposure +/− ulna nerve mobilisation. A
Aim: To identify reasons why surgical management of displaced supracondylar fractures of the humerus in children failed. Method: A retrospective analysis of 42 patients treated at our department over a 4 year period with case note and radiological review. Data was recorded with regards to mechanism of injury, operative method and technique with radiological assessment using Bauman’s angle and the Shaft-condylar angle. Using follow up information in case notes and radiologically, surgical “failures” were identified. Results: Overall demographics were consistent with previous studies with a median age of 6.5 years. 95% of the case notes and 75% of the X-rays were reviewed. 80% of the injuries were Gartland 3 type fractures. We noted a 9% incidence each of preoperative neurological and vascular injury and ipsilateral fracture. Median time to surgery following admission to A+E was 3.5 hours with 90% performed before midnight. Overall early fracture displacement rate was 25% with a reoperation rate of 14%. 88% of the early displacement resulted from Gartland 3 fractures treated with manipulation only. The remainder was attributable to CRIF/ORIF using a crossed lateral wiring configuration. We noted 1 case of iatrogenic ulnar nerve injury, 2 cases of cubitus varus @ 1 year associated with