| Literature DB >> 28754169 |
Rajat Mittal1,2, Prajith Jeyaprakash3, Ian A Harris4, Justine M Naylor4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Ankle fractures are common and can be treated with or without surgery. The aim of the present study was to compare patient reported outcomes between patients who sustained an Orthopaedic Trauma Association type 44-B1 ankle fracture who had either surgical or non-surgical fixation.Entities:
Keywords: Ankle; Fracture; Patient-reported ankle function
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28754169 PMCID: PMC5534062 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-017-2676-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Cohort ascertainment flowchart
Baseline demographics of surgical vs. non-surgical groups and respondents vs. non-respondents
| Variable | No-surgery (n = 38) | Surgery (n = 8) | p value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (sd) | 43 (14) | 39 (17) | 0.51 |
| Males, no. (%) | 21 (57%) | 2 (25%) | 0.14 |
Unadjusted results comparing non-surgery vs. surgery
| Variable | Non-surgical (n = 38) | Surgical (n = 8) | Mean difference or odds ratio (95% CI) | p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FAOQ, mean (sd)a | 50.3 (6.3) | 43.2 (11.3) | 7.1 (−2.4 to 16.6) | 0.12 |
| PCS, mean (sd)a | 50.8 (8.0) | 47.1 (9.7) | 3.7 (−2.8 to 10.3) | 0.26 |
| MCS, mean (sd)a | 54.2 (9.4) | 48.1 (9.7) | 6.0 (−1.4 to 13.5) | 0.11 |
| Any adverse event, no. (%)b | 1 (3%) | 2 (25%) | 12.3 (1.0 to 158) | 0.07 |
aDifference is mean difference (95% CI)
bDifference is odds ratio (95% CI)
Effect of surgery on outcome scores after adjusting for age and gender
| Estimate of effect (95% CI) | p value | |
|---|---|---|
| Effect of surgery on FAOQ | −6.14 (−11.7 to −0.6) | 0.03 |
| Effect of surgery on PCS | −3.2 (−8.8 to 2.4) | 0.25 |
| Effect of surgery on MCS | −5.7 (−13.2 to 1.9) | 0.14 |