Acute Deltoid Injury in Ankle Fractures: A Biomechanical Analysis of Different Repair Constructs

Author:

Wagner Emilio1ORCID,Wagner Pablo12ORCID,Escudero Mario I.13ORCID,Pacheco Florencia45,Salinas David1,Godoy-Santos Alexandre Leme6,Palma Felipe7,Guzmán-Venegas Rodrigo7,Berral–De la Rosa Francisco Jose8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Orthopaedic Department, Clinica Alemana de Santiago–Universidad del Desarrollo, Santiago, Chile

2. Orthopaedic Department, Hospital Militar de Santiago–Universidad de los Andes, Santiago, Chile

3. Department of Orthopaedics, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile

4. Hospital Clinico IST, Viña del Mar, Chile

5. SPORTS Medicina deportiva, Viña del Mar, Chile

6. Lab. Prof. Manlio Mario Marco Napoli, Departamento de Ortopedia e Traumatologia, Hospital das Clinicas, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil

7. Laboratorio LIBFE, Escuela de kinesiología, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de los Andes, Santiago, Chile

8. Department of Informatics and Sports, University Pablo de Olavide, Seville, Spain

Abstract

Background: The importance of the deltoid ligament in the congruency and coupling of the tibiotalar joint is well known. The current trend is to repair it in cases of acute injuries in the context of ankle fractures; however, there is limited information on how it should be reconstructed. The objective of this study was to compare different deltoid ligament repair types in an ankle fracture cadaveric model. Methods: Sixteen cadaveric foot-ankle-distal tibia specimens were used. All samples were prepared as a supination external rotation ankle fracture model. Axial load and cyclic axial rotations were applied on every specimen using a specifically designed frame. This test was performed without deltoid injury, with deltoid injury, and after repair. The reconstruction was performed in 4 different ways (anterior, posterior, middle, and combined). Medial clear space (MCS) was measured for each condition on simulated weightbearing (WB) and gravity stress (GS) radiographs. Reflective markers were used in tibia and talus, registering the kinematics through a motion analysis system to record the tibiotalar uncoupling. Results: After deltoid damage, in all cases the MCS increased significantly on GS radiographs, but there was no increase in the MCS on WB radiographs. After repair, in all cases, the MCS was normalized. Kinematically, after deltoid damage, the tibiotalar uncoupling increased significantly. All isolated repairs achieved a similar tibiotalar uncoupling value as its baseline condition. The combined repair resulted in a significant decrease in tibiotalar uncoupling. Conclusion: Our results show that deltoid repair recovers the tibiotalar coupling mechanism in an ankle fracture model. Isolated deltoid repairs recovered baseline MCS and tibiotalar uncoupling values. Combined repairs may lead to overconstraint, which could lead to postoperative stiffness. Clinical studies are needed to prove these results and show clinically improved outcomes. Clinical Relevance: This study helps in finding the optimum deltoid repair to use in an acute trauma setting.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

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