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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 93-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1621 - 1625
1 Dec 2011
Donken CCMA Goorden AJF Verhofstad MHJ Edwards MJ van Laarhoven CJHM

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 malleolar fractures resulted in good clinical and radiological outcome in this series at long-term follow-up.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 3 | Pages 395 - 399
1 May 1996
van Laarhoven CJHM Meeuwis JD van der Werken C

In a prospective, randomised trial of 81 patients with fractures of the ankle of AO types A, B and C we compared two regimes of postoperative management after internal fixation. The patients were mobilised either non-weight-bearing with crutches or weight-bearing in a below-knee walking plaster.

We found a temporary benefit in subjective evaluation only (65 v 50 points, Mann-Whitney test, cft, p = 0.02) for those with a below-knee walking plaster. There were no significant differences between the groups in the loaded dorsal range of movement (25° v 23°, Mann-Whitney test, cft, p = 0.16) or in the overall clinical result. Both treatments were considered to be satisfactory and their choice depends on the ability to mobilise non-weight-bearing, wound healing, the type of work and personal preference.