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The ANKLE and the FOOT TRAUMA MI Zucker, MD.

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Presentation on theme: "The ANKLE and the FOOT TRAUMA MI Zucker, MD."— Presentation transcript:

1 The ANKLE and the FOOT TRAUMA MI Zucker, MD

2 A dr Z Lecture On TRAUMA of the Ankle and Foot and some general concepts in musculoskeletal trauma evaluation

3 Rules for Success in Radiology
Know which exam to order Know which films you need Know good films from bad films, and don’t accept bad ones Read methodically by check list Know the common lesions Know the commonly missed lesions

4 General Approach to Musculoskeletal Radiology
Soft tissues Joints Bones

5 The ANKLE

6 The Ankle Series Anterior-posterior (AP)
Mortise (15 degree internal oblique) Lateral

7 Anterior-Posterior: Adult

8 AP: Kid

9 Mortise: Adult

10 Lateral: Adult

11 Lateral: Kid

12 The INJURIES ANKLE

13 When Does the Patient NEED Radiography?
The OTTAWA Rules Ankle and Foot

14 The OTTAWA ANKLE Rules Unable to weight bear immediately
Unable to walk four steps in medical facility Bone tenderness medial or lateral malleolus If “YES” to any, get ANKLE films

15 The OTTAWA FOOT Rules Bone tenderness base of fifth metatarsal
Bone tenderness navicular If “YES” to either, get foot films

16 Some OTTAWA Rule caveats
Not valid if injury not acute Some exclude patients under age 18 years or over 55 years These factors make the Rules less reliable, so we are more likely to do imaging in these circumstances.

17 OTTAWA Rules: Ankle Tenderness

18 OTTAWA Rules: Foot Tenderness

19 The Ankle Sprain Grade I: Soft tissues swelling/joint effusion
Grades II and III: Soft tissue swelling/joint effusion but may also have “FLAKE” avulsion fractures of the dorsum of the talus or navicular bones. Management differs, depending on grade

20 The Sprain: treatment Grade I Grades II/III
Ace wrap, crutches, limited time off weight bearing Air or posterior splint, crutches, prolonged period off weight bearing, orthopedic consult

21 Soft Tissue Swelling

22 Joint Effusion

23 “FLAKE” Fracture

24 FRACTURES of the ANKLE

25 WEBER’S Classification
Based only on location of a FIBULA fracture. A fracture, or no fracture, of the medial malleolus (tibia) does NOT change the classification.

26 WEBER’S Classification
Weber A: Fracture below the joint margin Weber B: Fracture begins at the joint margin Weber C: Fracture begins above the joint margin

27 Weber A, B, and C injuries are ALL from INVERSION

28 WEBER’S Assumptions Weber A: Anterior and posterior tibia-fibula and interosseous ligaments intact: STABLE Weber B: Anterior and posterior tibia-fibula ligaments torn: Moderately UNSTABLE Weber C: Interosseous ligament torn: Completely UNSTABLE

29 Management of WEBER Injuries
Weber A: Cast for 6 weeks Weber B: Frequently ORIF Weber C: Always ORIF ORIF: Open Reduction Internal Fixation

30 WEBER A

31 WEBER B

32 WEBER C

33 REMEMBER If the MEDIAL MALLEOLUS is also fractured, it does NOT change the Weber classification

34 What if ONLY the Medial Malleolus is Fractured?

35 Two possibilities Weber A “equivalent” from INVERSION: The Lateral Collateral Ligament is torn but the Lateral Malleolus did not fail EVERSION INJURY: an UNSTABLE Maisonneuve Fracture

36 Maisonneuve Fractures
These are EVERSION injuries that fracture the MEDIAL MALLEOLUS, tear the entire Interosseous Ligament and Membrane, and exit as a high FIBULA SHAFT fracture They are all UNSTABLE and are treated by ORIF

37 Maisonneuve Fracture: Lower

38 Maisonneuve Fracture: Upper

39 Caveat The high fibula fracture may be clinically occult
So, ALWAYS get AP/lateral films of the ENTIRE tibia and fibula if there is an “isolated” medial malleolus fracture on the ankle series

40 Bimalleolar Fracture Medial and lateral malleolar fractures, but still use Weber, as medial malleolar fracture does NOT change classification This is a Weber B

41 Trimalleolar Fracture
In addition to lateral and medial malleolar fractures, there is a fracture of the distal posterior tibia, called the POSTERIOR Malleolus. If large, extra ORIF needed.

42 “Ankle” Injuries that are really FOOT Injuries
Fractures of the base of the Fifth Metatarsal Fractures of the Anterior Process of the Calcaneous “Flake” fractures of the Talus or Navicular (we already did this, and they are components of an ankle injury)

43 Fractures of the Base of the Fifth Metatarsal

44 We will look at these again
When we get to the FOOT

45 Fractures of the Anterior Process of the Calcaneous

46 Stress fractures: repetitive microtrauma

47 Salter-Harris Injuries
Physis injuries, so KIDS ONLY!

48 Salter-Harris PHYSIS Injuries
SH I: Physis only SH II: Physis and metaphysis SH III: Physis and epiphysis SH IV: Physis, metaphysis and epiphysis SH V: Crush injury of physis SH VI: Avulsed piece of metaphysis, physis, and epiphysis

49 Salter-Harris what?

50 Salter-Harris I and IV

51 Remember: KIDS ONLY! NO Salter-Harris injuries are possible after physis closes: “Salter-Harris Nothing”

52 And now…

53 The FOOT

54 FOOT: Views AP Oblique Lateral

55 AP

56 AP

57 Oblique

58 Lateral

59 AP FOOT: Kid

60 Lateral FOOT: Kid

61 Talus Avulsions of dorsal margin: Ankle ligament injury (we did it under ANKLE) Osteochondral fracture: acute and stress Body of talus

62 Talus Body fracture

63 Osteochondral Fracture

64 Calcaneous Body: axial load Stress: repetitive microtrauma
Anterior process: ankle injury

65 Axial Load Fracture

66 Stress Fracture Initial film: pain one week
Follow-up film: pain three weeks

67 Fifth Metatarsal Base DANCER’S: tubercle, inversion, heals well
Crepe support, walking boot or cast, on or off weight bearing: depends on extent of fracture JONES: proximal shaft, inversion or direct blow or stress, sometimes delayed or non-union Posterior cast or boot, off weight bearing If non-union, ORIF

68 Dancer’s Fifth

69 Jones Fifth

70 Lisfranc Injuries Severe dorsal or plantar flexion at midfoot-forefoot junction Usually, very displaced and obvious Can be subtle ALL need surgery

71 Lisfranc: obvious

72 Lisfranc: subtle

73 Metatarsal fractures Spiral Stress

74 Spiral fracture

75 Stress fracture

76 Toe fractures “Stub” Crush

77 Toe fractures

78 GOODBYE Copyright 2004 MI Zucker


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