Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Ankle Injuries Anatomy Anatomy Ottawa Ankle Rules Hinge/saddle joint; wider anteriorly than posteriorly; thin capsule; curved surface of talus locks into place in dorsiflexion; lateral weaker than medial, especially anterior talofibular Subtalar joint: inferior talus + calcaneus; inversion and eversion Midtarsal joint: talonavicular, calcaneo-cuboid; abduction, adduction of forefoot Tarso-metatarsal: Lisfranc Pain near malleoli AND inability to weight bear (4 steps) immediately and in ED OR tender posterior / inferolateral / medial malleolus 100% sensitivity; 41% specificity for clinically relevant fractures (98% sensitivity, 50% specificity if 1-15yrs); reduces XR’s by 30% On AP: distance between tibia and fibula 1cm proximal to tibial plafond should be <6mm; if not, rupture of distal tibiofibular ligament 95% sensitivity overall X-Ray Interpretation Epidemiology Pathology 75% ankle injuries are sprains Medial = deltoid ligament (10%): usually associated with fracture (Maissoneuve), rarely damaged alone Lateral (90%): Anterior talo-fibular ligament most common (90% of laterals), test with ant drawer test Posterior talo-fibular, test with post drawer test Calcaneo-fibular, test with talar tilt test I Partial tear (usually anterior talo-fibular); little swelling, pain; no altered ROM; can weight bear II Partial tear (anterior talo-fibular + calcaneofibular); pain at rest; limited weight bearing; moderate-severe pain+swelling; tender inferior to lateral malleolus; mild-moderate instability III Complete tear of 2+ parts of lateral ligament; severe pain; decreased weight bearing; joint movement with AP stressing; needs POP for 6-8/52 and maybe OT Ankle Sprain Classification Management Rest; Ice (10mins per 2hrs for 48hrs) Compression, Elevation (to prevent swelling post-cooling); encourage early mobilisation with ankle strapping, motion and strength exercises at 48-72hrs; maybe OT for III 60% open fractures are caused by MVA, 10% from GSW Unstable fracture: suggested by swelling of both sides of ankle, deformity Stable fracture: suggested by no deformity, minor swelling, unilateral symptoms Pott’s Ankle Fractures Uni / bi / trimalleolar; bi and tri and unstable, uni depends of extent of damage Classification Weber A Supination adduction injury; fibula fracture below syndesmosis 1 Fibula only (stable; manage closed) 2 Fibula and medial malleolus (bi) 3 Above + posteromedial tibial fracture (tri) B Supination extension rotation injury; fibula fracture at level of syndesmosis; most common 1 Fibula only (stable; manage closed) 2 Fibula and medial malleolus fracture / medial ligament injury (bi) 3 Above + posterolateral tibial fracture (tri) C Fibula fracture above syndesmosis 1 Fibula only (stable; all involve a tibfib ligament injury; manage closed if stable but careful as posterior ligaments may also be involved) 2 Complex fracture of fibula 3 Proximal fracture of fibula Classification Weber Management Conservative: minimally displaced (<3mm) avulsion fractures of distal fibula without deltoid ligament injury (ie. Weber A1) = treat as sprain POP: non-displaced fractures with intact mortice joint without deltoid ligament injury = below knee POP OT: displaced / unstable / mortice incongruity / bi/tri malleolar / contralateral ligament damage Ankle Fractures Maisonneuve Fracture Proximal fibula fracutre (within 6cm of top) AND Medial malleolus (or deltoid ligament rupture) Unstable; needs OT; due to external rotational force Dupuytren’s Fracture High fibular fracture AND Disruption of ankle syndesmosis Anterior: force on dorsiflexed foot; associated anterior tibial fracture Posterior: most common; usually associated with ruptured tibiofibular ligament or lateral malleolus fracture; posterior force on plantarflexed foot Lateral: results in malleolus fracture Superior Management: relocate ASAP (by ED doc if dusky foot, absent pulse, tenting of skin); hang leg over edge of stretcher with flexed knee grasp toes and calcaneum plantar flex and invert traction moving whole foot in direction oppostite to deformity (usually anterolaterally) OT Ankle Dislocation Epidemiology MOI Achille’s Tendon Rupture 40-50yrs; associated with rheumatoid arthritis, SLE, chronic renal failure, long term steroids, gout, quinolones Forceful dorsiflexion of foot; blood supply weakest 2-6cm above calcaneus hence most common site of rupture Assessment Unable to walk / stand on toes; defect 2-6cm proximal to calcaneum; can still plantar flex without resistance; Thompson-Doherty-Simmons squeeze test Management OT if: young and detected <6hrs (lower rates of muscle atrophy, rerupture; earlier return of activity; risk of infection, skin necrosis, fistula formation Equinus cast otherwise with delayed surgical repair at 2-3/52 if no sign of repair