| Literature DB >> 35504849 |
Nico Ng1, James Randolph Onggo2, Mithun Nambiar1,3, Julian Tam Maingard1, David Ng1, Gaurav Gupta1, Dee Nandurkar1, Sina Babazadeh2, Harvinder Bedi2.
Abstract
Ankle diastasis injuries, or ankle syndesmotic injuries, are common among athletes who usually experience a traumatic injury to the ankle. Long-term complications are avoidable when these injuries are diagnosed promptly and accurately treated. Whilst ankle arthroscopy remains the gold standard diagnostic modality for ankle diastasis injuries, imaging modalities are still widely utilised due to the treatment having greater accessibility, being less invasive and the most cost effective. There are various imaging modalities used to diagnose diastasis injuries, varying in levels of specificity and sensitivity. These observation methods include; X-ray, computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ankle arthroscopy. This article uncovers common criteria and parameters to diagnose diastasis injuries through the implementation of different imaging modalities. The conclusions addressed within this article are deduced from a total of 338 articles being screened with only 43 articles being selected for the purposes of this examination. Across most articles, it was concluded that that plain X-ray should be used in the first instance due to its wide availability, quick processing time, and low cost. CT is the next recommended investigation due to its increased sensitivity and specificity, ability to show the positional relationship of the distal tibiofibular syndesmosis, and reliability in detecting minor diastasis injuries. MRI is recommended when ankle diastasis injuries are suspected, but not diagnosed on previous imaging modalities. It has the highest sensitivity and specificity compared to X-ray and CT.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990CTzzm321990; zzm321990MRIzzm321990; Ankle arthroscopy; X-ray; ankle diastasis injury; computed tomography; imaging modality; magnetic resonance imaging
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35504849 PMCID: PMC9442321 DOI: 10.1002/jmrs.589
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Radiat Sci ISSN: 2051-3895
Figure 1Ankle arthroscopy showing initial diastasis injury and post‐surgical fixation. (A) Initial arthroscopic findings (B) Post debridement of torn anterior inferior tibiofibular ligament and synovitis. (C) Probe test (probe fits in syndesmosis and able to be rotated freely) (D) Post fixation. [Colour figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Figure 2(A) Shows anterior posterior view of right ankle. (B) shows mortise view of right ankle. Both images display tibiofibular clear space measured 1 cm above tibial plafond, tibiofibular overlap and medial clear space.
Comparison of the medial clear space, tibiofibular overlap and tibiofibular clear space normal and abnormal values, positive and negative predictive value, sensitivity and specificity. , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
| Parameter | AP view | Mortise view | How to measure | Normal values | Abnormal values | Positive predictive value | Negative predictive value | Sensitivity | Specificity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medial clear space | Mean | 2.9 | ‐ | Measured between medial border of the talus and the lateral border of the medial malleolus on mortise view | <4 mm | >4 mm or >2–3 mm compared to contralateral side | 21% | 94% | 73% | 59% |
| Range | 2.0–5.0 | ‐ | ||||||||
| Tibiofibular overlap | Mean | 8.3 | 3.5 | Measured between medial border of fibular and lateral border of anterior distal tibial tubercle on anterior posterior/mortise view 1 cm above tibial plafond | >6 mm on AP view or >1 mm on mortise | <6 mm or <24% of fibular width on anterior posterior view or >1 mm on mortise view | 20% | 89% | 36% | 78% |
| Range | 1.8–15.1 | ‐1.9–9.9 | ||||||||
| Tibiofibular clear space | Mean | 4.6 | 4.3 | Measured between medial surface of talus and lateral surface of medial malleolus on anterior posterior view 1 cm above tibial plafond | <6 mm | >6 mm or >44% of fibular width on anterior posterior view | 33% | 97% | 82% | 75% |
| Range | 0.0–8.0 | 1.4–7.6 |
Figure 322 M, left Weber B with diastasis injury after twisting injury following a tackle by opponent during football match as delineated on normal and weight bearing X‐rays. Non weight bear series: (A) anterior, (B) mortise, (C) lateral. Weight bear series: (D) anterior, (E) mortise, (F) lateral.
Figure 4A 17 year old male who fell and internally rotated his right ankle. Mortise and lateral view X‐ray do not suggest a syndesmosis injury, but CT scan demonstrated a posterior malleolus avulsion fracture, likely involving the posterior inferior tibiofibular ligament. MRI scan performed showed the avulsion fracture with attached posterior inferior tibiofibular ligament, and a further tear of the interosseous membrane and the anterior inferior tibiofibular ligament. (A) Mortise view. (B) Lateral view. Image (C) Axial CT scan. Image (D) Axial MRI scan.
Figure 5CT scan of difference between the syndesmosis areas on weight bearing versus non weight bearing scans. (A) Left syndesmosis non weight bearing image (top left) ankle 64°, area 132 mm. Image (B) Right syndesmosis non weight bearing image (top right) angle 67°, area 151 mm. (C) Left syndesmosis weight bearing image (bottom left) angle 63°, area 135 mm. (D) Right syndesmosis weight bearing image (bottom right) ankle 66°, area 171 mm.
Sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of criteria 1 and 2 for AITFL and PITFL injuries.
| Diastasis injury | Criteria | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) | Accuracy (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AITFL | 1 | 100 | 70 | 84 |
| 1 and 2 | 100 | 93 | 97 | |
| PITFL | 1 | 100 | 84 | 95 |
| 1 and 2 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
AITFL‐anterior inferior tibiofibular ligament.
PITFL‐posterior inferior tibiofibular ligament.