| Literature DB >> 33861196 |
Gowreeson Thevendran1, Anish R Kadakia2, Eric Giza3, Daniel Haverkamp4, Jonkheer Pieter D'Hooghe5, Andrea Veljkovic6, Nasef Mohamed Nasef Abdelatif7.
Abstract
Foot and ankle sports injuries encompass a wide spectrum of conditions from simple contusions or sprains that resolve within days to more severe injuries that change the trajectory of an athlete's sporting career. If missed, severe injuries could lead to prolonged absence from the sport and therefore a catastrophic impact on future performance. In this article, we discuss the presentation of the commonest foot and ankle sports injuries and share recent evidence to support an accurate diagnosis and best management practice.Entities:
Keywords: Acute foot and ankle injuries; Rehabilitation; Return to play
Year: 2021 PMID: 33861196 PMCID: PMC8051311 DOI: 10.1051/sicotj/2021024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SICOT J ISSN: 2426-8887
Figure 1Intra-operative fluoroscopic image of stress test of syndesmosis following fixation of a fibula fracture. Note widening of the syndesmosis and medial clear space, with a lateral shift of the talus relative to the plafond.
Figure 2Graph illustrating percentage of surveyed surgeons that would choose one of four techniques (flexible fixation, surgical screws, hybrid construct, or other).
Studies comparing Deltoid Ligament repair versus nonrepair in syndesmotic stabilization.
| Article | N (repaired DL/unrepaired) | Level of evidence | Outcome | Medial clear space |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gu et al. [ | 40 (20/20) | II | Repair group better AFOAS and VAS pain | Better in DL repair group |
| Woo et al. [ | 78 (41/37) | III | AOFAS and VAS pain comparable | Better in DL repair group |
| Zhao et al. [ | 74 (20/54) | III | AOFAS and VAS pain comparable | Better in DL repair group |