AI Article Synopsis

  • This study developed a new 3D method to measure tibial plateau fracture displacement, addressing the low reliability of traditional measurement techniques.
  • A multicenter analysis involving 362 patients post-tibial plateau fracture surgery assessed the relationship between fracture displacement and functional outcomes using the KOOS questionnaire.
  • Results indicated that greater initial and residual fracture displacement was linked to significantly worse patient-reported outcomes, suggesting the importance of accurate measurement in treatment and recovery.

Article Abstract

Background: Conventional measures of fracture displacement have low interobserver reliability. This study introduced a novel 3D method to measure tibial plateau fracture displacement and its impact on functional outcome.

Methods: A multicentre study was conducted on patients who had tibial plateau fracture surgery between 2003 and 2018. Eligible patients had a preoperative CT scan (slice thickness ≤ 1 mm) and received a Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) questionnaire. A total of 362 patients responded (57%), and assessment of initial and residual fracture displacement was performed via measurement using the 3D gap area (mm). Patients were divided into four groups based on the 3D gap area size. Differences in functional outcome between these groups were assessed using analysis of variance (ANOVA). Multiple linear regression was used to determine the association between fracture displacement and patient-reported outcome.

Results: Functional outcome appeared significantly worse when initial or residual fracture displacement increased. Multivariate linear regression showed that initial 3D gap area (per 100 mm) was significantly negatively associated with all KOOS subscales: symptoms (-0.9, < 0.001), pain (-0.0, < 0.001), ADL (-0.8, = 0.002), sport (-1.4, < 0.001), and QoL (-1.1, < 0.001). In addition, residual gap area was significantly negatively associated with the subscales symptoms (-2.2, = 0.011), ADL (-2.2, = 0.014), sport (-2.6, = 0.033), and QoL (-2.4, = 0.023).

Conclusion: A novel 3D measurement method was applied to quantify initial and residual displacement. This is the first study which can reliably classify the degree of displacement and indicates that increasing displacement results in poorer patient-reported functional outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10531969PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm12186055DOI Listing

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