Aims. The morphology of medial
Abstract. The medial malleolus, once believed to be the primary stabilizer of the ankle, has been the topic of conflicting clinical and biomechanical data for many decades. Despite the relevant surgical anatomy being understood for almost 40 years, the optimal treatment of medial
Aims. The primary aim of this study was to address the hypothesis that fracture morphology might be more important than posterior
Aims. The optimal management of posterior
Introduction. The treatment of posterior
Background. Many approaches to management of medial
Aims. Posterior
Summary. Quantification of Three-Dimensional Computed Tomography (Q3DCT) is a reliable and reproducible technique to quantify and characterise ankle fractures with a posterior
The optimal management of rotationally-unstable ankle fractures involving the posterior malleolus remains controversial. Standard practice involves trans-syndesmotic fixation (TSF), however, recent attention has been paid to the indirect reduction of the syndesmosis by repairing small posterior
There is an increasing acceptance that the clinical outcomes following posterior
Background. There is an increasing acceptance that the clinical outcomes following posterior
Treatment of posterior
It has previously been suggested that among unstable
ankle fractures, the presence of a
Background. This study analyzes position of the peroneal tendons and status of the superior peroneal retinaculum (SPR) whenever a lateral
The AO Foundation advocates the use of partially
threaded lag screws in the fixation of fractures of the medial malleolus.
However, their threads often bypass the radiodense physeal scar
of the distal tibia, possibly failing to obtain more secure purchase
and better compression of the fracture. We therefore hypothesised that the partially threaded screws
commonly used to fix a medial
Introduction. Fixation of posterior
Introduction: Ankle fractures are common in trauma practice. Traditional teaching has been to use two screws for medial
Background. Ankle fractures represent an increasing workload, particularly in the elderly female population. The posterior tibial tendon is exposed to injury during displaced medial
We assessed the long-term (20 years) outcome
of closed reduction and immobilisation in 19 patients with an isolated
fracture of the posterior malleolus of the ankle treated at a single
hospital between 1985 and 1990. The assessments used were an Olerud
functional questionnaire score, physical examination using a loaded
dorsal and plantar range of movement measurement, radiological analysis
of medial joint space widening, the Cedell score for anatomical
alignment of all three malleoli, and the radiological presence of
osteoarthritic change. . There were excellent or good results in 14 patients (74%) according
to the Olerud score, in 18 patients (95%) according to loaded dorsal
and plantar range of movement assessment, in 16 patients (84%) as
judged by the Cedell score, and for osteoarthritis 18 patients (95%)
had an excellent or good score. There were no poor outcomes. There was
no correlation between the size of the fracture gap and the proportion
of the tibiotalar contact area when compared with the clinical results
(gap size: rho values -0.16 to 0.04, p ≥ 0.51; tibiotalar contact
area: rho values -0.20 to -0.03, p ≥ 0.4). Conservative treatment
of ‘isolated’ posterior
Fifty-six patients with displaced