Postoperative complications, pain (visual analogue scale), clinical and functional outcome based on DASH score, grip strength, X-ray evaluation, time to return to work and activity level were evaluated and compared at 3, 6 and 12 months of prospective follow-up.
Although modern operative intervention for calcaneal fractures has improved the outcome in many patients, there still is no real consensus on treatment, operative technique, or postoperative management. Vira® is a system for reconstruction-arthrodesis of severe calcaneal fractures, consisting in m The aim of our study was to elaborate a CPG to assist physiotherapists in decision making and to improve the efficacy and uniformity of care for patients with severe calcaneal fractures. The CPG was developed according to international methods of guideline development. To identify “best evidence” a structured search was performed. When no evidence was available, consensus between experts (physiotherapist and orthopaedic surgeons) was achieved to develop the guideline. To identify “best clinical experience” and “physiopathology reasoning” focus group of practicing physiotherapists was used. They reviewed the clinical applicability and feasibility of the guideline, and their comments were used to improve it. CPG include three phases determined from the physiopathology and biomechanical reasoning of surgical system (weeks after the surgery: 2a–5a, 5a–14a, 14a–+/−24a). Unfortunately, evidence related to the treatment of severe calcaneal fracture was sparse and often of poor methodologic quality. The recommendations that were included: early onset (2a week after the surgery) with early mobility and loading, program of home exercises, manual therapy (articular and miofascial techniques), walking in swimming pool, continuous electromagnetic fields of 99Hz with an intensity of 99 Gaussian during 30 min/day; electrotherapy of the intrinsic muscles of the feet (80Hz; 8:12, 20 mi), a program of active exercises of the feet (dorsiflexion and plantarflexion, not supination and pronation) and resistive exercises of triceps surae muscle (7a week), criotherapy and anti-inflammatory positions.
We present in this work our experience with the sural fasciocutaneous flap to treat coverage defects following a lower limb posttraumatic lesion. This work is a review of the fasciocutaneous sural flaps carried out in different centres between 2000 and 2005. The series consist of 14 patients, 12 men and 2 women with an average age of 38 years (23–54) and with a medium follow-up time of 2 years (12–48 months). In all of the cases, aetiology was a lower limb injury being the most frequent the distal tibial fracture (eight patients), followed by sequelae from Achilles tendon reconstruction (two patients), fracture of the calcaneus (two patients) and osteomyelitis of the distal tibia (two patients) secondary to an open fracture. Associated risk factors in the patients for performing a fasciocutaneous flap were diabetes (1 case) and cigarette smoking (4 cases). The technique is based on the use of a reverse-flow island sural flap with the superficial sural artery dependent on perforators of the peroneal arterial system. The anatomical structures which constitute the pedicle are the superficial and deep fascia, the sural nerve, external saphenous vein, superficial sural artery together with an islet of subcutaneous cellular tissue and skin. The flap was viable in 13 of 14 patients. Only in one case, a diabetic patient, the graft failed. No patient showed signs of infection. Slight venous congestion of the flap occurred in two cases. No further surgical intervention of the donor site was required because of morbidity. In two cases partial necrosis of the skin edges occurred which resolved satisfactorily with conservative treatment. The sural fasciocutaneous flap is useful for the treatment of complex injuries of the lower limbs. Its technical advantages are: easy dissection with preservation of more important vascular structures in the limb, complete coverage of the soft tissue defect in just one operation without the need of microsurgical anastomosis. All of that results in a well vascularised cutaneous islet and thus a reliable flap