Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jul 2023)

Objective Assessment of Syndesmosis Stability Using the Hook Test

  • Jakob Hallbauer,
  • Philipp Schenk,
  • Lea Herrmann,
  • Bernhard Wilhelm Ullrich,
  • Uta Biedermann,
  • Britt Wildemann,
  • Gunther Olaf Hofmann,
  • Felix Christian Kohler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12144580
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 14
p. 4580

Abstract

Read online

The hook test is a widely used intraoperative method for assessing syndesmosis stability. However, there are no recommendations regarding the force required to perform this test. Furthermore, the reliability of the test is unclear. Ten experienced surgeons performed hook tests on a cadaver bone model. The applied forces were recorded in a blinded manner. In addition, standardized hook tests with defined forces (50, 80, and 100 N) were performed on 10 pairs of cadaver lower legs and the syndesmosis was sequentially destabilized. Diastasis of the syndesmosis was recorded using an optical 3D camera system. A median force of 81 N (Range: 50 N–145 N) was applied. A proportion of 82% of the tests showed a force 2 mm could only be measured in 12 of the 19 evaluable specimens. The widely used hook test shows a high variability when performed in practice. Even in a standardized manner, the hook test cannot detect a relevant syndesmosis injury.

Keywords