scholarly journals Open anterolateral fracture dislocation of ankle joint: a rare case report

Author(s):  
Prasanna Anaberu ◽  
R. Prathik ◽  
R. Manish

<p class="abstract">Anterior ankle dislocation with associated compound bi-malleolar fracture is a rare injury. Ankle fracture dislocations most frequently occurs in young males caused by high energy trauma. The direction of the joint dislocation is determined by the position of the foot and the direction of the force being applied. A middle aged male presented to us with history of road traffic accident and was diagnosed to have anterior dislocation of right ankle joint with compound bi-malleolar fracture. Patient was taken to emergency operation theatre for wound debridement and immediate ankle reduction done under sedation. Due to wound contamination fracture fixation was delayed, once the wound healed bi-malleolar fracture fixation was done.</p>

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel Pina ◽  
Maria Rita Vaz ◽  
Ana Vaz ◽  
Nuno Borralho

Introduction: Impalement injuries are defined as rare, high-energy lesions caused by foreign bodies, usually steel bars or wooden objects, which pierce body cavities or extremities and remain interposed in the perforated body region. They usually occur with road accident or civil construction falls. Case Report:A 24-year-old male patient was admitted at the emergency department after a motorcycle accident, resulting a left leg impalement with a wooden object. A partial deep peroneal nerve palsy and a proximal third fibula fracture were observed. The foreign body removal and wound debridement were performed. The patient evolved favorably without complications, with complete neurological recovery and returning to his normal life activities. Discussion: Impalement injuries represent a challenge in pre-hospital care, emergency room, and operating room hospital care, due to its rarity and specificity: Type of object, anomalous foreign body location, and trajectory. There is a consensus that whenever possible, it should be removed in the operating room, due to the foreign body may be tamponing a major arterial laceration, thus preventing massive hemorrhage. Conclusion: Neurovascular injury exclusion, foreign body removal in the operating room, debridement, and antibiotic prophylaxis represent the treatment basis of these injuries. Keywords: Impalement, Trauma, Leg


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-38
Author(s):  
Ramesh Perumal ◽  
Vijay Shankar ◽  
Rakesh K. Yalavarthi ◽  
Dheenadhayalan Jayaramaraju ◽  
Shanmuganathan Rajasekaran

A 44-year-old male presented to us with right hip pain and limb shortening following road traffic accident. He was diagnosed to have blunt abdominal injury, right hip posterior fracture dislocation, right knee dislocation with vascular injury. Though vascular repair was attempted, he ended up with an above knee amputation. Hip joint was unstable even after closed reduction and intraoperatively, gluteus medius avulsion was noted. This is the second reported case of abductor tendon avulsion in posterior hip dislocations.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Tadahiko Ohtsuru ◽  
Yasuyuki Morita ◽  
Yasuaki Murata ◽  
Junya Itou ◽  
Yuji Morita ◽  
...  

Dislocation of the hip joint in adults is usually caused by high-energy trauma such as road traffic accidents or falls from heights. Posterior dislocation is observed in most cases. However, atraumatic anterior dislocation of the hip joint is extremely rare. We present a case of atraumatic anterior dislocation of the hip joint that was induced by an activity of daily living. The possible causes of this dislocation were anterior capsule insufficiency due to developmental dysplasia of the hip, posterior pelvic tilt following thoracolumbar kyphosis due to vertebral fracture, and acetabular anterior coverage changes by postural factor. Acetabular anterior coverage changes in the sagittal plane were measured using a tomosynthesis imaging system. This system was useful for elucidation of the dislocation mechanism in the present case.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 767-782 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikhail Lew P. Ver ◽  
John R. Dimar ◽  
Leah Y. Carreon

Study Design: Systematic review and case series. Objectives: Any acute injury to the posterior elements of the lumbar spine resulting in listhesis is considered a traumatic spondylolisthesis. This rare injury caused by high-energy trauma is variably described in the literature as fracture-dislocation, where only case reports and series have been published. Our objectives were to propose evidence-based treatment recommendations and a new classification system for this injury. Methods: A systematic review of literature from PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane without time frame limitations was performed, which included 77 level IV and V articles and 9 patients as case series in the analysis. Results: A total of 125 cases were reviewed with mean age of 30.5 years. Half of the cases resulted from a vehicular accident. Back pain presented in 82%, while 50% had neurologic deficits. Operative treatment was performed in 93.6% (posterior decompression [PD] = 4%; posterior spinal fusion [PSF] = 43.2%; interbody fusion [IB] = 46.4%) with overall fusion rates of 74%. Binomial regression analysis for achieving solid fusion showed a 28.6× higher odds for IB compared to PSF ( P = .008, r2 = 0.633). Subanalysis of cases with disc injuries revealed higher fusion outcomes for IB (87%) compared to PSF (46%; P = .006), while there were no significant differences for patients without disc injury. Pain and neurological symptoms improved significantly on final follow-up ( P < .001). Overall complication rate was 22%. Conclusion: Operative management with reduction, decompression for neurologic deficits, instrumentation, and fusion is recommended for traumatic spondylolisthesis. Interbody fusion is recommended to achieve better fusion outcomes especially with preoperatively identified disc lesions.


Hand ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas J. Yohe ◽  
Jadie De Tolla ◽  
Marc B. Kaye ◽  
David M. Edelstein ◽  
Jack Choueka

Background: Fractures of the radial shaft with disruption of the distal radial ulnar joint (DRUJ) or Galeazzi fractures are treated with reduction of the radius followed by stability assessment of the DRUJ. In rare instances, the reduction of the DRUJ is blocked by interposed structures requiring open reduction of this joint. The purpose of this study is to review all cases of irreducible Galeazzi fracture-dislocations reported in the literature to offer guidelines in the diagnosis and management of this rare injury. Methods: A search of the MEDLINE database, OVID database, and PubMed database was employed using the terms “Galeazzi” and “fracture.” Of the 124 articles the search produced, a total of 12 articles and 17 cases of irreducible Galeazzi fracture-dislocations were found. Results: The age range was 16 to 64 years (mean = 25 years). A high-energy mechanism of injury was the root cause in all cases. More than half of the irreducible DRUJ dislocations were not identified intraoperatively. In a dorsally dislocated DRUJ, a block to reduction in most cases (92.3%) was secondary to entrapment of one or more extensor tendons including the extensor carpi ulnaris, extensor digiti minimi, and extensor digitorum communis, with the remaining cases blocked by fracture fragments. Irreducible volar dislocations due to entrapment of the ulnar head occurred in 17.6% of cases with no tendon entrapment noted. Conclusions: In the presence of a Galeazzi fracture, a reduced/stable DRUJ needs to be critically assessed as more than half of irreducible DRUJs in a Galeazzi fracture-dislocation were missed either pre- or intraoperatively.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (5_suppl5) ◽  
pp. 2325967120S0007
Author(s):  
KH Yeoh ◽  
S Inderjeet ◽  
A Shukur ◽  
S Sharifudin

Pelvic ring injury associated with floating knee is relatively rare1. For our best acquaintance, few literatures have documented such injuries in an individual patient. The aim of this study is to validate the feasibility of damage control orthopedics (DCO). Method: A 15-years-old girl, involved in high-energy road traffic accident presented with hemodynamic instability. The pelvis was unstable with deformity in the right upper and lower extremities. Significant lacerations over forehead, right forearm and thigh present. Her radiographs proved the unstable pelvis fracture[A], multiple fractures of right lower limb with floating knee injury associated with PCL avulsion fracture[B-E], compound right ulna fracture[F], cerebral concussion, intra-abdominal injury and multiple lacerations establishing the distinctive of polytrauma. Results: The algorithm of DCO was resolute as treatment. Initial procedures of pelvic external fixation, right calcaneal traction, exploratory laparotomy, wound debridement and right long arm back-slab were done. CT pelvis and right knee performed after achieving initial fracture and hemodynamic stability. Internal fixations were applied after a period of time. The patient recovered after the DCO guided management with restoration of limb functional, and the quality of life greatly improved. Discussions: The DCO emphasizes the need to avoid further damage by the “second hit” which may originate from surgical procedures and focus on advanced life-saving supports.1 Our surgical team followed the principles of debridement and removal of the infection factors first, carried out definite surgery during the stable period. In addition to supply of the blood volume and protein, the nutritional support was emphasized. Conclusion: The DCO plays a pivotal role in the management strategies of complex pelvic ring injuries and floating knee with functional good outcome.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kangquan Shou ◽  
Richa Adhikary ◽  
Liang Zou ◽  
Hao Yao ◽  
Huarui Yang ◽  
...  

As a rare and exceptional injury with significant syndesmotic disruption, the outcome of Logsplitter injury remains poor and unfavorable. In this study, we retrospectively investigated the relationship between the intraoperative reduction quality and the prognosis such as the posttraumatic osteoarthritis to help surgeons achieve better functional outcomes for this high-energy transsyndesmotic ankle fracture dislocation. From January 2015 to February 2019, 31 patients (average 37.6±9.4 years with 19 male and 12 female) diagnosed with the Logsplitter injury were treated by ORIF procedure and enrolled in our study. Particularly, nine vital radiographic parameters including medial clear space, talocrural angle, superior clear space, tibiofibular clear space, tibiofibular overlap, talar tilt, coin sign, tibial medial malleolus angle, and fibular lateral malleolus angle were measured from a postoperative film (AP and mortise view). Next, we compared the clinical outcome by using range of ankle motion, AOFAS scores, Burwell-Charnley score system, and Kellergen-Lawrence criteria from the patients who obtained the intraoperative anatomical reduction with those who failed. Our results showed that AOFAS score with all the patients was 79.33±5.82 at the final follow-up. 14 (45.1%) of 31 patients were observed with radiographic posttraumatic arthritis of the ankle joint with an average Kellgren-Lawrence score of 1.75±1.6 at final follow-up. Most importantly, our results proved that there were significant differences between the patients eligible for anatomical reduction quality with those who failed with regard to OA rate (33.3% vs. 85.7%, P=0.003) and AOFAS scores (75.33±6.53 vs. 66.89±4.28, P=0.037) at the final follow-up. Furthermore, the functional outcome after the operation showed an increased range of motion of the ankle joint of the patients obtained anatomical reduction compared with those who failed (P<0.05). In this study, the significant discrepancy with regard to the functional outcomes was observed between the acceptable and unacceptable radiographic parameters, indicating that the quality of intraoperative reduction is scientifically significant and thus can be utilized as the major factor to predict the clinical outcomes for Logsplitter injuries. Moreover, this reduction algorithm arising from our study can also be applied to other ankle fractures and dislocation involving syndesmotic complex.


Hand ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. NP51-NP54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph A. Gil ◽  
Avi D. Goodman ◽  
Adam Starr

Background: Dislocation of all 5 carpometacarpal (CMC) joints of a single hand is a rare injury. Methods: The literature regarding CMC fracture-dislocations was reviewed and a case was presented. Results: The relevant literature was consolidated to clinically relevant categories including ‘Clinical Presentation and Diagnosis,’ ‘Management of CMC Fracture Dislocation and Hamate Fractures,’ and ‘Outcomes.’ Conclusions: The mechanism associated with this injury is often high energy that causes multiple simultaneous life- or limb-threatening injuries that could distract the examiner from identifying this injury. The case we present involves an axial dislocation of the carpus that resulted in dorsal dislocations of all CMC joints, dislocation of the hamate-capitate articulation, as well as fractures of the first metacarpal and the hamate.


Swiss Surgery ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 283-288
Author(s):  
Maurer ◽  
Stamenic ◽  
Stouthandel ◽  
Ackermann ◽  
Gonzenbach

Aim of study: To investigate the short- and long-term outcome of patients with isolated lateral malleolar fracture type B treated with a single hemicerclage out of metallic wire or PDS cord. Methods: Over an 8-year period 97 patients were treated with a single hemicerclage for lateral malleolar fracture type B and 89 were amenable to a follow-up after mean 39 months, including interview, clinical examination and X-ray controls. Results: The median operation time was 35 minutes (range 15-85 min). X-ray controls within the first two postoperative days revealed an anatomical restoration of the upper ankle joint in all but one patient. The complication rate was 8%: hematoma (2 patients), wound infection (2), Sudeck's dystrophy (2) and deep vein thrombosis (1). Full weight-bearing was tolerated at median 6.0 weeks (range 2-26 weeks). No secondary displacement, delayed union or consecutive arthrosis of the upper ankle joint was observed. All but one patient had restored symmetric joint mobility. Ninety-seven percent of patients were satisfied or very satisfied with the outcome. Following bone healing, hemicerclage removal was necessary in 19% of osteosyntheses with metallic wire and in none with PDS cord. Conclusion: The single hemicerclage is a novel, simple and reliable osteosynthesis technique for isolated lateral type B malleolar fractures and may be considered as an alternative to the osteosynthesis procedures currently in use.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 247275122110233
Author(s):  
Rory C. O’Connor ◽  
Sead Abazi ◽  
Jehuda Soleman ◽  
Florian M. Thieringer

Introduction: Orbital roof fractures are uncommon and normally associated with high energy trauma in which multiple other injuries are present. Most can be managed non-operatively with close observation. However, in a small proportion the defect is such that it permits the development of a meningoencephalocele, which can cause exophthalmos, a reduction in visual acuity and pain, all of which are unlikely to improve without surgical treatment. In light of their scarcity and the potential of serious risks with surgery that includes meningitis and visual disturbance (or even loss), thorough planning is required so that the meningoencephalocele can be reduced safely and the orbital roof adequately reconstructed. Methods: We report a case of a patient with a frontal bone defect, orbital roof fracture and associated meningoencephalocele that presented years after being involved in a road traffic accident in another country, who complained of a significant headache and orbital pain. The use of 3D modeling to help plan the surgery, and intraoperative 3D navigation to help negotiate the anterior skull base are described along with the reconstruction of the frontal bone and orbital roof using titanium mesh contoured on the 3D model. Conclusions: Although conservative management of orbital roof fractures predominates; those that are symptomatic, have associated neurologic symptoms or pose a risk to the eyesight warrant a surgical approach. The methods of repair, which center around separating the intracranial and intraorbital contents, are described in the context of this patient and previous cases, and a treatment algorithm is proposed.


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