Ankle fracture

Revision as of 22:44, 16 February 2012 by Jswartz (talk | contribs)

Background

Imaging

  • Ottawa Ankle Rules
  • 3 views:
    • AP - Best for isolated lateral and medial malleolar fractures
    • Oblique (mortise) - Best for evaluating for unstable fracture or soft tissue injury
      • At a point 1cm proximal to articular surface of tibia the space between the tib/fib should be ≤6cm
    • Lateral - Best for posterior malleolar fractures

Classification (Danis-Weber System)

  • Type A
    • Fibular Fx at or below the joint line without syndesmotic involvement
    • Supination-adduction injury
  • Type B
    • Fibular Fx at joint level w/ partial syndesmotic ligament injury
    • Supination-external rotation injury
  • Type C
    • Fibular Fx above joint level w/ complete syndesmotic disruption
    • Pronation-eversion injury

Management

  1. Lateral malleolar Fx
    1. Stable - >90% have good clinical result
      1. Treat like severe ankle sprain
    2. Unstable = displacement >2mm, medial fx, or medial ligament disruption
      1. Medial tenderness indicates need for stress xrays to determine degree of instability
  2. Medial or posterior malleolar Fx
    1. Must rule-out other injuries
    2. If non-displaced, isolated:
      1. Short-leg posterior splint (ankle at 90')
      2. Non-weight bearing
      3. Refer in 5-7d
  3. Lateral malleolar fx with deltoid injury OR bimalleolar OR trimalleolar fx
    1. Short-leg posterior splint (ankle at 90o)
    2. Refer within few days for surgical intervention

See Also

Source

  • Tintinalli