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PRELIMANARY RESULTS OF A METHOD FOR EARLY ANKLE FIXATION USING A PERCUTANEOUS APPROACH



Abstract

The management of closed ankle fractures requiring open reduction and internal fixation is dependent upon soft tissue swelling to determine the timing of the surgery. At Exeter in 2001 one third of all trauma cases were operated on “out of hours”, in 2007 less than ten percent were principally because of the lack of anaesthetic staff. The senior author has developed a technique of percutaneous ankle fixation that may be undertaken at an early stage despite the presence of swelling.

A retrospective study of four years focusing on time to surgery, time to discharge and complications was compared with a cohort selected at random that had undergone open fixation from the same period. Patients undergoing percutaneous fixation were extracted using the Plato database and all patients were included. Admission documentation, operation notes and subsequent clinic letters were used to ascertain the outcomes. Pre and post-operative imaging was evaluated.

Over a four year period two consultants and four specialist registrars performed the technique on a total of 22 patients. The mean time to surgery was 2.04 days for the percutaneous cohort (range 0–5 days) compared with 4.04 for the open cohort (range 1–10). Time to discharge was 4.6 days to 5.8 in favour of percutaneous. No complications were experienced in the percutaneous cohort compared with 6 patients in the open.

Preliminary results demonstrate a reduced waiting time for surgery and a quicker discharge. Percutaneous fixation is an option when swelling precludes open fixation.

The abstracts were prepared by Mr D J Bracey, Editorial Secretary. Correspondence should be addressed to him at Royal Cornwall Hospital, Treliske, Cornwall TR1 3LJ, England.