European Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery & Traumatology | 2021

Ankle CT scan allows better management of posterior malleolus fractures than X-rays

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Undiagnosed and undertreated posterior malleolus fractures lead to early ankle instability and arthritis. A preoperative CT scan could improve the management of those fractures. This study assessed the benefits of a systematic ankle CT scanner to diagnose and manage posterior malleolus fracture. A monocentric retrospective cohort study was conducted. Sixty consecutive patients with bimalleolar fractures were operated and underwent a preoperative CT scan. The mean age was 50.0 years old (18.6 years old) with a mean body mass index of 20.3 (kg/m2) (11.4 kg/m2) and 71.7% (43/60) of women. The primary outcome was the rate of posterior malleolus fragment diagnosed on X-rays and on CT scan. Secondly, interobserver and interobserver’s agreement were compared between conventional X-rays and CT scan. Thirty-five (58.3%) posterior fragment fractures were observed on X-rays and 53 (88.3%) on the preoperative CT scan (p\u2009<\u20090.01). The intraobserver reproducibility for X-rays was low (0.02 [−\u20090.23; 0.27]) and moderate for CT scan (0.45 [0.0; 0.84]). The interobserver reproducibility for X-rays was moderate (0.39 [0.15; 0.60]) and excellent for CT scan (0.78 [0.0; 1.0]). A wide proportion of bimalleolar fractures are associated with posterior malleolus fractures and undiagnosed with standard X-rays. We advocate a systematic preoperative CT scan in the management of bimalleolar fractures. Level IV, retrospective cohort study. 2218999v0, date of registration: 11/08/2020 (retrospectively registered).

Volume None
Pages 1 - 9
DOI 10.1007/s00590-021-03104-y
Language English
Journal European Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery & Traumatology

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