Affiliation:
1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Foot and Ankle Division NYU Langone Health New York City New York USA
2. Human Anatomy and Embryology Unit, Department of Pathology and Experimental Therapeutics, School of Medicine and Health Sciences University of Barcelona Barcelona Spain
3. MIFAS by GRECMIP (Minimally Invasive Foot and Ankle Society) Merignac France
Abstract
AbstractPurposeThe purpose of this retrospective review was to determine the prevalence of osteochondral lesions (OCLs) of the lateral talar dome in patients with anterior ankle impingement with an associated hypertrophic distal fascicle of the anterior tibio‐fibular ligament.MethodsRetrospective chart review identified 40 patients who underwent anterior ankle arthroscopy for the management of anterior ankle impingement. Clinical outcomes assessed included pre‐ and postoperative foot and ankle outcome score (FAOS), visual analogue scale (VAS), complications, failures, secondary surgical procedures, return‐to‐work data and return‐to‐sport data.ResultsThirty‐two patients with a mean follow‐up time of 29.3 ± 10.4 months were included. The hypertrophic distal fascicle of the anterior tibio‐fibular ligament was hypertrophic in 29 patients (90.6%), with a mean thickness of 2.5 ± 0.4 mm on MRI. There were 22 OCLs of the lateral talar dome (75.9%) with an associated hypertrophic distal fascicle of the anterior tibio‐fibular ligament visualized during arthroscopy. The international cartilage repair society gradings of the lesions included 3 (13.6%) grade I lesions, 15 (68.1%) grade II lesions, 3 (13.6%) grade III lesions, and 1 (4.6%) grade IV lesion. There was a statistically significant improvement in mean FAOS and VAS scores from preoperative to postoperative (p < 0.001). No cases of syndesmotic instability were observed following resection of hypertrophic distal fascicle of the anterior tibio‐fibular ligament.ConclusionThis retrospective case series demonstrated that a hypertrophic distal fascicle of the anterior tibio‐fibular ligament was associated with an OCL of the lateral talar dome identified during arthroscopic evaluation. In addition, preoperative MRI demonstrated poor sensitivity for the detection of these OCLs. Heightened awareness is warranted for potential lateral talar dome OCLs in patients presenting with anterolateral ankle impingement with a hypertrophic ATiFLdf identified on preoperative MRI in the absence of an associated OCLs.Level of EvidenceLevel IV, Retrospective case series.