| Literature DB >> 19340408 |
Michel P J van den Bekerom1, Daniel Haverkamp, Gino M M J Kerkhoffs, C Niek van Dijk.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Boden et al. suggested syndesmosis fixation was not necessary in distal pronation external rotation (PER) ankle fractures if rigid bimalleolar fracture fixation is achieved and was not necessary with deltoid ligament injury if the fibular fracture is no higher than 4.5 cm of the tibiotalar joint. We asked whether height of the fibular fracture with or without medial stability predicted syndesmotic instability as compared with intraoperative hook testing in these fractures. We reviewed 62 patients (35 male, 27 female) with a mean age of 45.6 years (range, 19-80 years). Using a bone hook applied to the distal fibula with lateral force to the distal fibula in the coronal plane, we fluoroscopically assessed the degree of syndesmosis diastasis in all patients. The mean height of the fibular fracture in patients with a positive hook test was higher than in patients with a negative hook test (54.2 mm; standard deviation [SD], 29.3 versus 34.8 mm; SD, 21.4, respectively). The height of the fibular fracture showed a positive predictive value of 0.93 and a negative predictive value of 0.53 in predicting syndesmotic instability; specificity of the criteria of Boden et al. was high (0.96). However, sensitivity was low (0.39) using the hook test as the gold standard. The criteria of Boden et al. may be helpful in planning, but may have some limitations as a predictor of syndesmotic instability in distal PER ankle fractures. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III, diagnostic study. See Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19340408 PMCID: PMC2835603 DOI: 10.1007/s11999-009-0823-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Orthop Relat Res ISSN: 0009-921X Impact factor: 4.176
Studies comparing the level of the fibular fracture with a gold standard as a guideline for syndesmotic stabilization in ankle fractures
| Study | Year | Country | Patients | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boden et al. [ | 1989 | US | 23 cadavers | Syndesmotic fixation in ankle fractures is only necessary when the fibular fracture was more than 45 mm from the ankle and rigid medial malleolar fixation was not possible (only deltoid ligament injury) |
| Yamaguchi et al. [ | 1994 | US | 21 Weber C | Supports the Boden guidelines, no widening of the mortise followup |
| 3 syndesmotic screws | ||||
| 1- to 3-year followup | ||||
| Chissell and Jones [ | 1995 | UK | 43 Weber C | After stable fixation of a medial malleolar fracture, a diastasis screw is required if the fibular fracture is greater than 15 cm from the joint |
| 31 syndesmotic screws | ||||
| 2- to 9-year followup | ||||
| van den Bekerom et al. (current study) | 2009 | Netherlands | 62 pronation external rotations | Criteria of Boden et al. are helpful in surgical planning but intraoperative testing is essential |
| 36 syndesmotic screws | ||||
| No followup |
Fig. 1The intraoperative hook test was performed observed under fluoroscopic control.
Fig. 2The mean height of the fibular fracture in patients with a positive hook test was greater than the fibular fracture height of patients with a negative hook test. 0 = No instability is observed when performing the “hook test”; 1 = instability is observed when performing the “hook test”.