| Literature DB >> 19543741 |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: A large variety of therapeutic modalities for calcaneal fractures have been described in the literature. No single treatment modality for displaced intra-articular calcaneal fractures has proven superior over the other. This review describes and compares the different percutaneous distractional approaches for intra-articular calcaneal fractures. The history, technique, anatomical and fracture considerations, limitations and the results of different distractional approaches reported in the literature are reviewed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19543741 PMCID: PMC2774417 DOI: 10.1007/s00402-009-0915-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Orthop Trauma Surg ISSN: 0936-8051 Impact factor: 3.067
Fig. 1Single-point distraction techniques by Foldes [23] (1920; a), Kaess [23] (1922; b), Gillette [22] (c), and Carabba [7] (d)
Fig. 2Two-point distraction techniques by Böhler [4] (1929; a), Conn [9] (b), Olson [41] (c) and Frohlich [17] (d)
Fig. 3Three-point distraction techniques by Gill [21] (a), McBride [37] (b), Harris [26] (c) and Forgon-Zadravecz [15] (1983; d)
Demographics for eight available studies concerning percutaneous distraction techniques
| Study (evidence level) | Trauma | Classification | Surgical treatment | np/nf | Age (years) | Male (%) | FU (months) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Walde [ Level IV | 85% Fall 15% MVA | Sanders 16% Type II 57% Type III 27% Type IV | 1-Point distraction (tuberosity + K-wire leveraging) | 63/67 | 46 (18–82) | 72 | 68 (24–120) | Zwipp 61% (Very) good 39% Fair–poor |
Schepers [ Level IV | 84% Fall 16% MVA | Sanders 38% Type II 28% Type III 28% Type IV | 3-Point distraction (tuberosity-cuboid, tuberosity-talus + bone-punch) | 50/61 | 46 (16–65) | 72 | 35 (13–75) | AOFAS 36% Excellent 36% Good 28% Fair–poor |
Stulik [ Level IV | 96% Fall 4% Other | Sanders 61% Type II 30% Type III 9% Type IV | 1-Point distraction (tuberosity + K-wire leveraging or bone-punch) | 176/205 | 44 (13–67) | 85 | 43 (25–87) | CN 16% Excellent 56% Good 28% Fair–poor |
McGarvey [ Level IV | 32% Fall 48% MVA 20% other | Sanders 32% Type II 26% Type III 29% Type IV | 1-Point distraction (tuberosity + bone-punch) External fixation | 31/33 | 42 (19–64) | 77 | 25 (6–55) | AOFAS 66 points (42–92) |
Frohlich (1999) [ Level III | NS | NS | 2-Point distraction (talus-tuberosity) | NS/94 | NS | NS | NS | Mod Merle d’Aubigne |
| 79% Good to excellent | ||||||||
Van Loon [ Level IV | 73% Fall 7% MVA 20% Other | Crosby-Fitzgibbons 93% Type II 7% Type III | Forgon-Zadravecz 3-Point distraction (talus-cuboid, tuberosity- talus) | 15/15 | 44 (21–67) | 73 | 14 (6–26) | CN 27% Excellent 47% Good 26% Fair–poor |
Kuner [ Level IV | NS | NS | 3-Point distraction (MT1-tuberosity, tibia-tuberosity) | −/45 | NS | NS | NS | Merle d’Aubigne |
| 71% Good to excellent | ||||||||
Forgon [ Level IV | NS | Own classification 30% Type I 40% Type II 30% Type III | 3-Point distraction (talus-cuboid, tuberosity-talus) | −/265 | 41 | NS | 12 | Own score 43% Excellent 47% Good 10% Fair–poor |
MVA motor vehicle accident, np number of patients, nf number of fractures, FU follow-up, CN Creighton-Nebraska outcome score, AOFAS American Orthopaedic Foot Ankle Society hindfoot score, NS not specified
Outcome and complication rates after treatment of displaced intra-articular calcaneal fractures with percutaneous distraction techniques
| Study | Fair/poor result (%) | Unable to work (%) | Loss of reduction (%) | Infection (%) | Arthrodesis (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walde [ | 39 | NS | 1 | 13 | NS |
| Schepers [ | 28 | 10 | 30 | 15 | 15 |
| Stulik [ | 28 | 26 | 4.5 | 8.7 | NS |
| McGarvey [ | NS | NS | NS | 30 | NS |
| Frohlich [ | 21 | NS | NS | 2.1 | 2.1 |
| Van Loon [ | 26 | NS | 67 | 13 | NS |
| Kuner [ | 29 | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Forgon [ | 10 | NS | 4.1 | 3.7 | NS |
NS not specified