Aims. This prospective cohort study aims to determine if the size of
the tendon gap following
A total of 80 patients with an
The best management for
Introduction: The
One hundred patients with
Aim. To determine the effects of knee and ankle position on tendo Achilles (TA) gap distance in patients with
Rupture of the tendo Achillis is a common injury
with a rising incidence. Traditionally the key question following
this injury has been whether or not to operate. However a contemporary
Cochrane review highlighted that the method of rehabilitation may
also have an important contribution to the outcome. Since this review,
various early weight-bearing rehabilitation protocols have been
described. Currently evidence points to the use of early functional
rehabilitation, regardless of operative or non-operative management.
However, there is no consensus on which exact functional rehabilitation
protocol should be used. Future research should be directed towards
improving our understanding of how the different rehabilitative
components interact in the tendo Achillis as it heals.
In a prospective, randomised, multicentre study, 112 patients (99 men and 13 women, aged between 21 and 63 years) with acute, complete rupture of tendo Achillis were allocated either to surgical treatment followed by early functional rehabilitation, using a brace, or to non-surgical treatment, with plaster splintage for eight weeks. The period of follow-up was for two years. Evaluation was undertaken by independent observers and comprised interviews, clinical measurements, isokinetic muscle performance tests, heel-raise tests and an overall outcome score. The rate of rerupture was 20.8% after non-surgical and 1.7% after surgical treatment (p <
0.001). Surgical and non-surgical treatment produced equally good functional results if complications were avoided. However, the rate of rerupture after non-surgical treatment was unacceptably high.
A consensus for the best treatment for acute Achilles tendon ruptures has not yet been reached. Non-operative functional treatment using ankle foot orthosis has shown a reduction in re-rupture rate. This study aims to compare operative, cast immobilisation and functional treatment with cam- walker for acute Achilles tendon ruptures. A retrospective review of medical records of patients with acute Achilles tendon rupture between 1999–2770 was carried out. Open repairs were carried out in the surgical group. In the cam- walker group, patients were immobilised in equines backslab for 2 weeks and then transferred to cam- walker with 3 heel-wedges giving plantar flexion of 20–30 degrees. One wedge was removed weekly after 4 weeks. After 6 weeks, patients removed the cam-walker at night. After 10 weeks, they mobilised in a shoe with a raise. After 12 weeks, the cam-walker was removed. There were 56 patients reviewed of whom 20 were treated operatively, 23 were treated non- operatively in a cast and 13 were treated functionally in a cam-walker. The average age of operative group was 39 years with average post operative immobilisation in a cast of 7.4 weeks. 15% had major complications with 2 DVTs and 1 re-rupture and 45% minor complications with 4 wound infections, 3 sural nerve damage and 2 patients complained of pain. The average age of non-operative group in a cast was 46 years with average immobilisation of 8 weeks. 12% had minor complications with 2 DVTs, 1 re-rupture and 12% healing complications with 1 non- healing and 2 delayed healing. The average age of functional group treated with cam- walker was 44.5 years. They were immobilised in a cast for 2.5 weeks and cam-walker for 9 weeks. There were 35% major complications with 3 DVTs and no re-ruptures. 2 DVTs were treated and 1 DVT spontaneously resolved. Metz et al. (2007) conducted a similar study and found that 34% of surgically treated patients suffered from complications other than rerupture. The main advantage they found with conservative treatment is the elimination of wound complications and intra-operative sural nerve damage. This retrospective review shows that surgical treatment provides a lower re-rupture rate but higher complication rate. A prospective study is currently underway to look at re-rupture rates and functional outcome after non-operative functional treatment with cam-walker.
We performed a systematic review of the literature to determine
whether earlier surgical repair of acute rotator cuff tear (ARCT)
leads to superior post-operative clinical outcomes. The MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Web of Science, Cochrane Libraries,
controlled-trials.com and clinicaltrials.gov databases were searched
using the terms: ‘rotator cuff’, or ‘supraspinatus’, or ‘infraspinatus’,
or ‘teres minor’, or ‘subscapularis’ AND ‘surgery’ or ‘repair’.
This gave a total of 15 833 articles. After deletion of duplicates
and the review of abstracts and full texts by two independent assessors,
15 studies reporting time to surgery for ARCT repair were included.
Studies were grouped based on time to surgery <
3 months (group
A, seven studies), or >
3 months (group B, eight studies). Weighted
means were calculated and compared using Student’s Aims
Methods
The dichotomy between surgical repair and conservative management of acute Achilles tendon ruptures has been eliminated through appropriate functional management. The orthoses used within functional management however, remains variable. Functional treatment works on the premise that the ankle/hindfoot is positioned in sufficient equinus to allow for early weight-bearing on a ‘shortened’ Achilles tendon. Our aim in this study was to test if 2 common walking orthoses achieved a satisfactory equinus position of the hindfoot. 10 sequentially treated patients with 11 Achilles tendon injuries were assigned either a fixed angle walking boot with wedges (FAWW) or an adjustable external equinus corrected vacuum brace system (EEB). Weight bearing lateral radiographs were obtained in plaster and the orthosis, which were subsequently analysed using a Carestream PACS system. The Mann-Whitney test was used to compare means.Introduction
Methods
The October 2023 Research Roundup. 360. looks at: Gut microbiota in high-risk individuals for rheumatoid arthritis associated with disturbed metabolome and initiates arthritis by triggering mucosal immunity imbalance; International Consensus on Anaemia Management in Surgical Patients (ICCAMS); Sleep disturbance trends in the short-term postoperative period for patients undergoing total joint replacement; Achilles tendon tissue turnover before and immediately after an
Aims. The purpose of this study was to report the experience of dynamic
intraligamentary stabilisation (DIS) using the Ligamys device for
the treatment of
Meniscal tears are the most common knee injuries, occurring in
Meniscal tears are the most common knee injuries, occurring in
Aims. To determine whether the findings from a landmark Canadian trial
assessing the optimal management of
Introduction and Objectives: