AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the occurrence of fibular head avulsion fractures in patients with medial tibial plateau fractures and evaluates the effectiveness of radiographs in detecting these fractures.
  • Out of 63 patients, 22.2% had fibular fractures, with some cases only detected by CT scans, highlighting potential gaps in radiographic detection.
  • The presence of fibular fractures was linked to worse functional outcomes and a higher likelihood of peroneal nerve damage, suggesting the need for routine CT scans for better diagnosis prior to surgery.

Article Abstract

Objective: The aims of this work are to determine how frequently medial tibial plateau fractures are accompanied by fibular head avulsion fractures and evaluate the sensitivity of radiographs detecting them, and also to assess if the presence of fibular fracture is correlated with long-term functional outcome and peroneal nerve damage.

Materials And Methods: A retrospective chart review of operated patients with medial tibial plateau fractures at level I trauma center during 2002-2008 was performed. From 63 patients imaged preoperatively, 59 had CT and radiographs, three had only CT, and one only radiograph. The presence and fragment size of fibular fracture were retrospectively evaluated. Body mass index (BMI) and functional outcome measurements (the Modified Lysholm knee score and WOMAC) were available for 46 patients.

Results: Fourteen out of 63 patients (22.2%) had fibular fractures. Of the 59 patients with both CT and radiographs, 12 had fibular fractures, and of these, nine were seen with both modalities and three only in CT. Functional scores were available for ten patients with fibular fracture. Patients with fibular fracture seen on radiographs had a significantly higher score on WOMAC function (26 vs. 7; p = 0.027). The patients with fibular fractures had also higher BMI (p = 0.035). Of the six patients with peroneal nerve damage, 50% had fibular fracture.

Conclusions: In patients with operatively treated medial tibial plateau fracture, the fibular fractures are relatively common. Detecting it is important, as it may be associated with worse functional scores and peroneal nerve paresis. Some fibular fractures may remain undetected on radiographs, hence preoperative CT is recommended.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6647171PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00256-019-03191-3DOI Listing

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