Foot & Ankle Orthopaedics (Nov 2022)
Arthroscopic-Assisted Minimal Invasive Surgery for Weber C Ankle Fractures: Comparation to Open Reduction Internal Fixation
Abstract
Category: Trauma; Arthroscopy Introduction/Purpose: After acceptable reduction and internal fixation for ankle fractures, some patients regularly suffer from residual symptoms, presumably due to occult intra-articular injuries. Recently, arthroscopic-assisted technique for ankle fractures was introduced. However, there was no previous study that investigate the outcomes of arthroscopic-assisted minimal invasive surgery (MIS) for pronation type ankle fractures. The aim of this study was to compare the clinical outcomes after arthroscopic- assisted MIS surgery to conventional open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) for Weber C ankle fractures. Methods: Between 2016 and 2019, 86 patients with Weber C type ankle fractures with minimum 2 years follow up were included. Patients were sorted to 2 groups according to operation technique (MIS group (n=34): arthroscopic-assisted MIS, ORIF group (n=52): conventional ORIF). In MIS group, fibula fractures were fixed using fibula nail. Medial and posterior malleolus fractures were fixed using cannulated screw arthroscopically assisted with pin point wound. Syndesmosis injury was treated with arthroscopic reduction and screw fixation. Intraarticular lesions such as loose body or osteochondral lesion of talus were removed or debrided arthroscopically. Clinical outcomes were compared using a visual analog scale (VAS), Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS). In addition, postoperative complications including posttraumatic arthritis were evaluated. Results: There were no significant differences between 2 groups in VAS, FAOS. There were 2 cases of postoperative infections and 4 cases of wound problems in ORIF group, but there was no complication in MIS group. There were 1 cases of obvious advanced posttraumatic arthritis in MIS group and 3 cases in ORIF group. Conclusion: Arthroscopic-assisted minimal invasive surgery was effective treatment option with low rate of wound problem in for Weber C ankle fractures.