Consensus in chronic ankle instability: aetiology, assessment, surgical indications and place for arthroscopy

Ankle sprains are the most common injuries sustained during sports activities. Most ankle sprains recover fully with non-operative treatment but 20-30% develop chronic ankle instability. Predicting which patients who sustain an ankle sprain will develop instability is difficult. This paper summarise...

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Veröffentlicht in:Orthop Traumatol Surg Res 2013-12, Vol.99 (8 Suppl), p.S411-S419
Hauptverfasser: Guillo, S, Bauer, T, Lee, J.W, Takao, M, Kong, S.W, Stone, J.W, Mangone, P.G, Molloy, A, Perera, A, Pearce, C.J, Michels, F, Tourné, Y, Ghorbani, A, Calder, J
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container_end_page S419
container_issue 8 Suppl
container_start_page S411
container_title Orthop Traumatol Surg Res
container_volume 99
creator Guillo, S
Bauer, T
Lee, J.W
Takao, M
Kong, S.W
Stone, J.W
Mangone, P.G
Molloy, A
Perera, A
Pearce, C.J
Michels, F
Tourné, Y
Ghorbani, A
Calder, J
description Ankle sprains are the most common injuries sustained during sports activities. Most ankle sprains recover fully with non-operative treatment but 20-30% develop chronic ankle instability. Predicting which patients who sustain an ankle sprain will develop instability is difficult. This paper summarises a consensus on identifying which patients may require surgery, the optimal surgical intervention along with treatment of concomitant pathology given the evidence available today. It also discusses the role of arthroscopic treatment and the anatomical basis for individual procedures.
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title Consensus in chronic ankle instability: aetiology, assessment, surgical indications and place for arthroscopy
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