Partial revision of a dislocated periprosthetic tibial fracture after total ankle replacement with a stemmed implant and plate fixation: A case report

INTRODUCTIONTotal ankle arthroplasty (TAR) procedures have become more reliable and incidence is increasing. A growing number of postoperative complications can be expected and should be correctly addressed.PRESENTATION OF CASEA 43-year-old woman suffering from severe ankle osteoarthritis underwent...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of surgery case reports 2024, Vol.116, p.109336-109336
Hauptverfasser: De Rito, Giuseppe, Biscione, Roberto, Volpe, Antonio, Liverani, Luca, Zanoli, Gustavo Alberto, Maritati, Martina
Format: Report
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:INTRODUCTIONTotal ankle arthroplasty (TAR) procedures have become more reliable and incidence is increasing. A growing number of postoperative complications can be expected and should be correctly addressed.PRESENTATION OF CASEA 43-year-old woman suffering from severe ankle osteoarthritis underwent TAR (Stryker's Infinity with Prophecy alignment guides, uncemented tibial component and cemented talus component). After a fall, one month after the surgery, she presented with a fracture of the medial malleolus and an anterior periprosthetic fracture of the tibia, with anterior dislocation of the tibial prosthetic component. Fracture fixation and partial revision surgery was planned using the same anterior surgical access. To restore length, rotation and joint articulation, the medial malleolus was first reduced and synthesized with a plate and 6 screws through additional minimally invasive medial ankle incisions. Once the medial malleolus was stabilized, the already mobilized tibial component was removed. Freehand cuts under fluoroscopic guidance on the anterior surface of the tibia were performed. After a final check with a trial component, a Stryker's Inbone II stem, which matched the previously inserted talar component, was implanted and partially cemented to fill the remaining bone gaps.DISCUSSIONOnly few case reports of periprosthetic ankle fractures exist, and none of them were similar to ours. There are no published precedents for this revision approach from a stemless to a stemmed tibial implant without changing the talar implant.CONCLUSIONPartial revision after a complex periprosthetic fracture results in a satisfactory outcome if surgery is performed in specialized centers.
ISSN:2210-2612
2210-2612
DOI:10.1016/j.ijscr.2024.109336