| Literature DB >> 35097376 |
Jordan S McCoy1, Amy L Meyers1, Matthew Marquart2.
Abstract
Level V, expert opinion.Entities:
Keywords: conservative treatment; posterior process fracture; posterior process of talus; subtalar dislocation; talus
Year: 2020 PMID: 35097376 PMCID: PMC8697178 DOI: 10.1177/2473011420918570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foot Ankle Orthop ISSN: 2473-0114
Figure 1.(A) Lateral, (B) mortise, and (C) anteroposterior ankle radiographs at the time of injury showing deformity and a fracture fragment posterior to the talus. (E, F) Foot radiographs showing medial subtalar joint dislocation. (D, G, H) Radiographs taken after closed reduction and splinting of the subtalar dislocation. Reduction of the posterior process of the talus fracture is difficult to accurately assess on plain films.
Figure 2.Progression of sagittal computed tomography scan images visualizing the posterior process of the talus fracture post-reduction.
Figure 3.Axial computed tomographic views of the posterior process of the talus fracture: (A) Proximal articular involvement at the ankle joint with minimal displacement. (B) The middle portion of the PPT fracture where the greatest displacement is noted. (C) The distal articular involvement of the subtalar joint with minimal displacement.
Figure 4.Post-traumatic fracture blisters that developed within the first few days of injury. Care must be taken with regard to operative planning and timing as this can potentially create operative wound and healing complications.
Figure 5.Follow-up lateral radiographs 14 weeks after injury
Figure 6.Follow-up anteroposterior and oblique radiographs of foot 14 weeks after injury.
Figure 7.Mortise view of ankle 10 weeks out from injury.
Comparison of Case Reports.
| Case Report | Patient | Mechanism | Operative Approach | Fixation | Postoperative Protocol | Follow-up/Outcomes | Final Imaging |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebraheim, 1994 | 27 y old, male | High-energy MVA | Posteromedial | 2 cannulated Herbert screws in lateral tubercle | Postop splint transitioned to SLC, NWB × 6 wk | 1-y f/u: minimal discomfort | Healed on radiograph, intact hardware |
| Naranja, 1996* | 26 y old, male | Fall from 15 feet on plantarflexed foot | Posterolateral | 4.0-mm cannulated screw | Splint, NWB (amount of time not specified) | 8-mo f/u: no pain with ambulation. Decreased subtalar ROM | Healed on radiograph with no evidence of arthrosis |
| Chen, 1996 | 52 y old, female | Motorcycle accident | Approach not specified | "miniscrew’ in medial tubercle | SLC NWB × 3 wk, then dynamic ankle brace and partial weightbearing for 3 wk with aggressive postoperative ROM | 32-mo f/u: full ROM | Radiograph showed successful healing |
| Liu, 2012 | 17 y old, male | Plantarflexion and strong inversion playing basketball | Posteromedial | 3 absorbable screws (two 2.7-mm, one 3.5-mm) | SLC NWB × 6 wk | 1-y f/u: No clinical outcomes mentioned | MRI: No AVN or post-traumatic arthrosis (fracture healing not mentioned) |
| Park, 2016 | 50 y old, male | Fall from 10 feet forced plantarflexion and inversion | Posteromedial | 2 headless 3.0-mm compression screws | SLC NWB × 6 wk | 13-mo f/u: return to sports and work at preinjury level | Satisfactory bone healing on CT scan and radiograph at 6 mo |
Abbreviations: AVN, avascular necrosis; CT, computed tomography; FHL, flexor hallucis longus; f/u, follow-up; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; MVA, motor vehicle accident; NWB, nonweightbearing; ROM, range of motion; SLC, short leg cast.
* Open medial subtalar dislocation.