Thirty cases of posterior ankle impingement in 28 patients were treated over a 10-year period (1982–1992). All conditions were caused by forced plantar flexion. An os trigonum or posterior process fracture was demonstrated radiographically in 63% of these cases, and an intact posterior process was demonstrated in 33%. Ten cases were lost to follow-up. Of the remaining 20 cases, in 18 patients 12 (60%) improved with nonoperative treatment; 8 (40%) required operative excision. The results were good to excellent in 7 patients and fair in 1 patient. Operative excision for the treatment of recalcitrant posterior ankle impingement can relieve symptoms and allow a return to full preinjury activities.
At the present time, syndesmotic screw fixation is recommended when there is a tibiofibular diastasis, a Maisonneuve fracture, or syndesmotic instability after fixation of distal tibia-fibula fractures. The aim/purpose of this study was to demonstrate the optimal level of syndesmotic screw placement before creation of a Maisonneuve fracture. Legs of 17 embalmed cadavers underwent knee disarticulation. The legs were then dissected to expose the syndesmosis/interosseous membrane. The paired cadaver legs were tested in two groups. In group I (10 pairs), the left legs were tested without any syndesmotic fixation and the right legs were tested with the syndesmosis fixed at 2.0 cm above the tibiotalar joint. In group II (7 pairs), the syndesmosis in each left leg was fixed at 3.5 cm above the tibiotalar joint and the right leg syndesmosis was fixed at 2.0 cm above the tibiotalar joint. After ligament section and syndesmosis fixation, each leg was then jig mounted with transfixing wires through the proximal tibia and calcaneus. The ankle was placed in neutral with 15 degrees of pronation and a load of 150 pounds and a strain gauge anchored medially and laterally. The proximal tibia was internally rotated while the ankle was held fixed until syndesmotic, bony, or hardware failure occurred. Torsional force, the degree of rotation and the amount of syndesmotic widening were quantitated. Two-tailed t-test comparing no fixation with fixation at 2.0 cm indicated less syndesmotic widening with screw placed at 2.0 cm (P = 0.04). Two-tailed t-test comparing screw fixation at 2.0 cm and 3.5 cm indicated less syndesmotic widening with screw placed at 2.0 cm (P = 0.07). It would seem reasonable to place a syndesmotic screw at 2.0 cm above tibiotalar joint.
The endoscopic technique can be done outpatient and has a low morbidity and high patient satisfaction. The time to return to normal activity level is short. Sufficient exposure of the Achilles tendon and removal of the calcaneal prominence and retrocalcaneal bursa can be done effectively using an endoscopic technique.
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