Arthroscopically-assisted osteosynthesis of calcaneal fractures: clinical and radiographic results of a prospective study

The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the clinical and radiographic results in a group of patients with calcaneal fractures treated by means of minimally invasive, arthroscopically-assited osteosynthesis. A total of 175 calcaneal fractures in 154 patients were treated surgically at the T...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta chirurgiae orthopaedicae et traumatologiae Čechoslovaca 2012-06, Vol.79 (3), p.228-232
Hauptverfasser: Kopp, L, Obruba, P, Mišičko, R, Edelmann, K, Džupa, V
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Sprache:cze ; eng
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Zusammenfassung:The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the clinical and radiographic results in a group of patients with calcaneal fractures treated by means of minimally invasive, arthroscopically-assited osteosynthesis. A total of 175 calcaneal fractures in 154 patients were treated surgically at the Trauma Centre of Masaryk Hospital between January 2006 and August 2010. Twenty-six patients were enrolled in this prospective study. They had a total of 30 calcaneal fractures, of which 28 were managed by minimally invasive, arthroscopically-assisted osteosynthesis. The patient's records included demographic data, relevant medical history, fracture type by Sander's classification, associated injuries, time to surgery, length of surgery, post-operative quality of reduction, Böhler's angle before and after surgery, healing complications, hospitalisation time, follow-up period, bone union, functional outcome in Rowe score and hardware removal. The patients underwent minimally invasive osteosynthesis under arthroscopic and radiographic guidance. For this procedure, patients with Sanders type IIa and IIb fractures were predominantly indicated. The group also included patients older than 60 years, smokers, patients addicted to alcohol, a diabetic patient, a dialysed patient and a patient with chronic lower-limb lymphoedema. The patient group included 21 men with 25 fractures (83.5%) and five women with five fractures (16.5%). Nine men (42.9%) were heavy smokers; three men (14.3%) and one woman (20 %) were addicted to alcohol. All fractures were closed and, according to the Sanders system, were classified as follows: 16 fractures as type IIa (57.1%); eight fractures as IIb (28.6%); two fractures as IIIab (7.1%) and one IIIac and IIIbc (3.6% respectively). Six patients (23.1%) sustained bilateral fractures of the lower-limb. In the post-operative period, no disturbance of soft tissue healing and no superficial or deep wound infection were observed. The outcome of fracture reduction assessed by CT examination was excellent in 24 fractures (85.6%), satisfactory in one (3.6%) and poor in one fracture (3.6%). The mean Böhler's angle was +7.2 degrees pre-operatively and +35.4 degrees post-operatively. In all patients bone union was achieved within 3 months; hardware was removed in 19 fractures (67.9%). Functional outcomes according to the Rowe score were very good in 18 (69.2%), good in four (15.4%) and satisfactory in four (15.4%) patients. There were no poor results. The me
ISSN:0001-5415
2570-981X
DOI:10.55095/achot2012/033