| Literature DB >> 35989770 |
Kiya Shazadeh Safavi1, Aryan Rezvani2, Cory F Janney3, Jie Chen1, Waleed Cassis4, Navid Darayan5, Vinod K Panchbhavi1, Daniel C Jupiter6,1.
Abstract
Ankle fractures are common injuries treated by orthopedists. Indications for operative repair of deltoid ligament (DL) injuries in ankle fracture patients are debated. The purpose of this review is to determine the indications for operative DL repair. Ovid MEDLINE, CINAHL, and Scopus were searched up to December 2019. Web of Science was searched up to August 2018. Search terms included "Deltoid" and "Ligament" or "Ligaments." Comparative studies assessing conservative vs operative DL repair were searched for. Articles meeting inclusion criteria were screened in two stages to determine eligibility. Out of 1,542 articles, nine were included in our qualitative synthesis. These nine studies included 449 patients, of which 233 were treated with open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) with or without trans-syndesmotic (TS) screw fixation, and 205 of which were treated with ORIF with DL repair. The remaining 21 patients were managed nonoperatively, had no evidence of DL injury, or were lost to follow-up. There is a lower rate of malreduction associated with DL repair compared to TS screw fixation. Moreover, DL repair may be useful in treating patients with Weber Type C fractures, concomitant DL-syndesmotic disruption, or residual valgus instability following ORIF in isolated lateral malleolar fractures.Entities:
Keywords: ankle fractures; ankle instability; deltoid; deltoid ligament; medial collateral ligament; repair; syndesmosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35989770 PMCID: PMC9388398 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.27040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Anatomical dissection of the deltoid ligament showing (A) anterior, (B) lateral, and (C) posterior views of the deltoid ligament complex. These images are original and were created by the authors of this study.
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram showing article selection process
This figure was created using the PRISMA 2009 Flow Diagram. 1,542 papers were found. Screening based on article title and abstract, we excluded 1,444, leaving 98. Of these, 22 duplicates were excluded, leaving 76. Screening full manuscripts that discussed the DL another 67 were excluded as they were not specifically related to our topic, leaving nine to be used in our qualitative synthesis
Literature reviewed on deltoid ligament (DL) injuries in ankle fractures.
AOFAS = American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society, LOE = level of evidence, MCS = medial clear space, ORIF = open reduction internal fixation, PER = pronation-external rotation, PITFL = posterior-inferior tibiofibular ligament, SER = supination-external rotation, TCS = tibiofibular clear space, VAS = visual analog scale
| Study | Characteristics | Groups | Conclusion | Limitations |
| Stromsoe et al. [ | - Weber type B and C fractures with radiographic evidence of DL injury (MCS widening) | - ORIF alone - ORIF and DL repair | - Ruptured DL can be left unexplored if anatomic MCS reduction is possible. | - None noted |
| Sun et al. [ | - Weber type B fractures with DL rupture and lateral/posterior-lateral dislocation of the talus. - Measured outcomes: MCS, plantar and dorsiflexion, AOFAS scores, Philips and Schwartz scores | - ORIF alone - ORIF + superficial DL repair - ORIF + deep DL augmentation | - No indication for routine exposure and repair/augmentation of DL injuries in Weber type B fractures - DL augmentation can replacesyndesmotic fixation under certain circumstances | - Small sample size - No randomization - Comorbidities not recorded |
| Woo et al. [ | - Closed SER and PER lateral malleolar fracture with DL injury - Measured outcomes: radiographic findings (MCS), AOFAS and VAS scores, foot function index (FFI) | - ORIF alone - ORIF + DL repair | - Medial instability may exist following ankle fracture fixation - Direct DL repair is adequate for restoring medial stability in high-grade unstable fractures with syndesmotic instability | - Retrospective design - Small sample size - Short follow-up period (17 mos.) - MRI and arthroscopy not performed routinely - Osteochondral lesion diagnosis and treatment not performed routinely - Consensus review performed by 2 readers with experience disparities |
| Zhao et al. [ | - Closed Weber B and C fractures with evidence of DL injury (MCS>6mm) - Measured Outcomes: AOFAS and VAS scores as well as MCS measurements (preoperatively, postoperatively, and at final follow-up) | - ORIF alone - ORIF + DL repair | - Surgical DL repair can decrease postoperative MCS and malreduction rates, especially in Weber Type C fractures. | - Retrospective design - No random group assignment - MCS ≥ 6 mm on X-ray without stress or gravity-stress defined DL rupture - MCS ≥ 5 mm defined malreduction |
| Gu et al. [ | - Ankle fractures with evidence of DL injury (MCS>5mm) -Measured Outcomes: AOFAS and VAS scores as well as postoperative MCS measurements. | - ORIF alone - ORIF + DL repair | DL repair can restore MCS, improve fracture healing and ankle function, as well as reduce chronic pain. | - Small sample size - Short follow-up period |
| Wu et al. [ | - Weber type B and C ankle fractures with suspected DL injury (MCS >4mm and talus outward shifting. - Measured Outcomes: AOFAS, VAS, and SF-36 scores. MCS measurements | - ORIF + transsydesmotic screw fixation - ORIF + DL repair | -DL repair with suture anchor provided functional and radiologic outcomes comparable to those of screw fixation with a lower malreduction rate. | - Small sample size - Short follow-up period |
| Jones et al. [ | - isolated SER-IV bimalleolar equivalent ankle fracture (Weber B fracture with MCS >5mm on stress test) - Measured outcomes: Lower Extremity Function Scale, Foot and Ankle Disability Index, Short Musculoskeletal Function Assessment, Foot and Ankle Outcome Score, AOFAS scores, VAS scores, and overall function of the lower extremity. | - ORIF + transsydesmotic screw fixation - ORIF + DL repair | DL repair can restore congruity to the ankle joint and has subjective, functional, and radiologic outcomes comparable to syndesmotic fixation while obviating the need to remove symptomatic implants in isolated SER-IV bimalleolar equivalent ankle fractures | - Retrospective design - Small sample size - Large number of surgeons performed surgical procedures - Several patients did not return outcome questionnaires |
| Lee et al. [ | - Isolated malleolar fractures - Only patients with residual valgus instability following ORIF underwent DL repair - Measured Outcomes: Mean anterior deltoid ligament grade (MADLG), mean posterior deltoid ligament grade (MPDLG), and mean MCS for both injured and uninjured sides. | - Non-operative treatment - ORIF alone - ORIF + DL repair | -Valgus instability may exist even after repair of the fracture. -Anterior deltoid ligament repair is adequate in limiting postoperative talar excursion. -The anterior deltoid may contribute to medial stability more-so than what has previously been described. | - Small sample size - Short follow-up period - Only radiographic outcomes assessed - No comparison between high-grade unstable fracture patients who have undergone DL repair and those who have not |
| Little et al. [ | - SER IV equivalent ankle fractures with ligamentous injury and syndesmotic instability. - Measured Outcomes: Postoperative CT showing syndesmotic reduction compared to the contralateral extremity, maintenance of reduction (based on MCS and TCS) on final postoperative radiograph | - ORIF + transsydesmotic screw fixation - ORIF + DL repair + PITFL repair | -Lateral malleolar fixation with DL and PITFL repair provided excellent radiographic outcomes in SER-IV equivalent ankle fractures without increasing postoperative complications, therefore eliminating the need for transsydesmotic screw fixation. | - Small sample size - No comparison made between the two groups in terms of functional outcomes - Some patients excluded to evaluate a homogenous group of patients |