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- Title
The impact of sustentaculum tali fracture on clinical outcome in patients affected by isolated calcaneal fractures.
- Authors
Sani, Giacomo; Giabbani, Niccolò; Zanna, Luigi; Buzzi, Roberto; Pio, Angelica Sofia; Rastrelli, Vieri; Nardi, Cosimo
- Abstract
Introduction: The sustentaculum tali is displaced in almost half of calcaneal fractures and during surgical fixation represents one of the main reference points upon which the other bone has to be reduced. The purpose of this study was to investigate which subtalar joint fracture pattern is more frequently associated with sustentaculum tali involvement. Furthermore, correlation between postoperative clinical outcome and sustentaculum tali integrity was performed. Material and methods: Patients with isolated calcaneal fractures were analyzed. Sanders-type fracture and involvement of both sustentaculum tali and calcaneocuboid joint were detected on computed tomography imaging; postoperative AOFAS scores were analyzed according to sustentacular involvement. Results: Fifty calcaneus fractures in 47 patients were included in the final analysis. The sustentaculum tali was fractured in 18 cases (36.0%), thus contradicting its supposed constant position. Sanders type 3 and 4 fractures were more frequently associated with fractured sustentaculum than type 2 (p = 0.012). Sanders type 4 fractures were associated with displaced sustentacular fragment significantly more than type 2 and 3 (p = 0.043). Patients with intact sustentaculum tali reported significantly higher (p < 0.001) mean AOFAS scores than the uninjured group (84.4 ± 9.1 and 74.3 ± 9.5, respectively). Conclusion: Sanders type 3 and 4 fractures were more frequently associated with sustentaculum tali and/or calcaneocuboid joint involvement than simpler fractures. Injury of sustentaculum tali was related to significant worse postoperative clinical outcomes, underlying the relevance of this fragment on clinical course.
- Subjects
ANKLE fractures; SURGICAL complications; HEEL bone fractures; TREATMENT effectiveness; HEEL bone; FRACTURE fixation; SUBTALAR joint; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; RESEARCH funding; COMPUTED tomography
- Publication
European Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery & Traumatology, 2024, Vol 34, Issue 2, p1017
- ISSN
1633-8065
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00590-023-03760-2