Post on 30-Apr-2020
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
The Evaluation and Treatment of Ankle Instability –Getting It Right G R E G O R Y R W A R Y A S Z , M D , C S C S
M A S S A C H U S E T T S G E N E R A L H O S P I T A L
D I V I S I O N O F F O O T A N D A N K L E S U R G E R Y
T E A M P H Y S I C I A N N E W E N G L A N D R E V O L U T I O N
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Disclosures Neither I nor my spouse/partner has a relevant financial relationship with a commercial interest
to disclose.
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Epidemiology of Ankle SprainsRepresent one of the most common injuries seen by healthcare providers
Worldwide there is around 1 ankle sprain per 10,000 person-days
Greatest risk factor for a sprain is a prior sprain
2 million acute sprains in the USA alone each year (Waterman et al 20120)
Waterman’s NEISS database study found 49.3% of ankle sprains to be from athletic activity, 26.6% from fall from stairs and ground level fall only representing 6.7%.
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Anatomical Considerations3 Complex ArticulationsTibiotalar Joint
Tibiofibular Syndesmosis
Subtalar Joint
LigamentsLateralAnterotalofibular Ligament (ATFL)
Calcaneofibular Ligament (CFL)
Posterior Talofibular Ligament (PTFL)
Deltoid (Superficial and Deep)
SyndesmosisAITFL, interosseous ligament, interosseous membrane , PITFL, and inferior transverse ligament
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Signs/Symptoms Of SprainPain
Trouble with Weightbearing
Tenderness
Significant Swelling
Eccymosis
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Mechanism: Is Reviewing Game Film Helpful?InversionInjuries of the lateral ligaments
More common than eversion
ATFL injury is most common
20% are ATFL and CFL
PTFL injuries are rare in non-fractures
Eversion Deltoid ligament injuries are less common due to the robustness of the ligamentous complex
External Rotation (High Ankle Sprain)May lead to significant instability
Syndesmosis structure prevents dissociation of the tibia and fibula and also prevents posterolateral bowing of the fibula
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Classification SystemGrade 1Mild sprain “ligaments stretch”Little swelling or tenderness, no mechanical instability on exam, no loss or function
Grade 2Moderate sprainPartial tearing Moderate swelling, ecchymosis, tenderness. Mild to moderate instability on exam. Some loss of motion.
Moderate pain with weightbearing and ambulation
Grade 3Severe sprainComplete ligament ruptureSevere swelling, ecchymosis, tenderness and pain. Significant mechanical instability. Significant loss of
function and motion. Unable to bear weight
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
How do I Diagnose?HistoryPatients will describe a “twisting injury” or a fall usually
Access to Game Film
Physical ExamInspect, palpate, determine if able to weight bear, injury specific maneuvers
Should document what spots are painful and try to differentiate between nearby structures Lateral ligaments vs distal fibula vs peroneals
Deltoid vs medial malleolus vs posterior tibial tendon vs medial talar dome
Lateral talar dome vs anterior syndesmosis
Don’t miss the 5th metatarsal fracture, Achilles rupture, posterior tibial tendon rupture, proximal fibula fracture, peroneal tendon dislocation, etc
Standing Alignment… Is the foot cavovarus or planovalgus?
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Physical Exam PearlsAnterior Drawer Test
Compare to contralateral, tests the ATFL ligament
Stabilize the tibia with one hand and apply a gentle anterior force to the heel with the foot in a neutral position (slight plantarflexion and inversion)
Talar Tilt Test
Compare to contralateral
Tests the CFL ligament
Ankle in neutral position, the ankle is inverted. Compare to contralateral side
Eversion Stress Test
Tests for deltoid injury
Stabilize tibia, roll calcaneus laterally. If pain then this suggests a deltoid injury
External Rotation Test
Tests for syndesmotic injury
Knee flexed at 90 deg and ankle in neutral position. Examiner will stabilize the ankle proximal to the ankle joint and with the other hand externally rotates the foot.
Squeeze Test
Squeeze midcalf
Pain indicates syndesmotic injury or concern for proximal fibula fracture
Syndesmosis Drawer (Shuck Test)
Compare to contralateral side
Examiner grabs fibula between thumb and index finger, the fibula is pulled anterior and pushed posteriorly.
Pain or increased translation(compared to contralateral side indicate syndesmotic injury)
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Imaging?
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
X-RaysBasic weightbearing x-ray series of at minimum foot and ankle weightbearing. Consider adding in full length tibia films if concerned for proximal fibula fracture (Maissoneuve)
Stress Radiographs I always compare to “normal side”
Usually wait after an acute sprain until patient has a chance to do PT
I prefer Telios Jig which normalizes force applied. Better tolerated by patients as well compared to applying manual stress
ViewsAnterior Drawer (lateral view)
Varus Stress
Valgus Stress
I personally think the external rotation x-ray is not as useful as bilateral weightbearing CT scan for evaluating the syndesmosis
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
MRI: Doc, I saw my MRI results and I must need surgery, my ATFL is ruptured
Typically helpful for intra-articular pathology (fractures, edema, OCD), Achilles injuries, posterior tibial tendon injuries, peroneal tenosynovitis, syndesmosis
Lots of people have ATFL rupture but are not dynamically unstable
MRI image of ruptured ATFL and peroneus brevis split tear
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
CT ScanTraditionally better for fractures
Weightbearing CT scan Helpful tool for alignment of the hindfoot
Helpful to diagnose syndesmosis as you can compare to contralateral side
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Conservative TreatmentImmobilization
Ice
Compression
Physical TherapyPeroneals, gastroc
Functional Bracing
Taping, KT taping
InjectablesCortisone
PRP ( Lai et al)
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Surgical TreatmentUp to 20% may fail conservative management and may require surgical treatment.
Teramoto et al
Yasui et al
Glazebrook et al
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Lateral Ligament SurgeryBrostrom +/-Gould, KarlssonOpen vs Arthroscopic Recent systematic review (Brown et al in Arthroscopy) suggested no long-term advantage to arthroscopic method.
With or Without suture brace
Anti-RoLL (Glazebrook et al)Open vs Arthroscopic vs Percutaneous
Historic SurgeriesWatson-Jones- PB tenodesis fibula to talusEvans: PB tenodesis to fibulaChrisman-Snook- Split PB graft tenodesis to fibula and calc
Who Needs Concomitant Calcaneal Osteotomy or tibial osteotomy?Planovalgus, cavovarus, “Z-Foot”, early arthritisNot always as simple as just soft tissue.
Who Needs Concomitant Peroneal Surgery?
Yasui et al
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Should We Be Fixing Lateral Avulsion Fractures?Diallo et al (FAI 2018)10 patients underwent ORIF acutely
ATFL and CFL were found to be attached to avulsed fragment.
The average size was 6.3 mm (range, 4–9 mm) in width from anterior to posterior and 5.2 mm (range, 4–7 mm) in length from superior to inferior.
Fragment displacement increased under varus stress
Not enough evidence to fix currently, but an area needing more research
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Deltoid SurgeryIsolated deltoid injuries are 3-4% of all ankle ligament injuries
Most can be treated conservatively
If left untreated, progressive valgus can form
To Reconstruct vs RepairConsider in combined injuries of the deltoid ligament and spring
ligament with or without post tib injury
In patients with persistent instability and poor ligament quality, consider reconstruction with autograft
Hintermanns series of 52 patients revealed favorable results
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
SyndesmosisESSKA-AFAS consensus panel recommends distinguishing acute isolated syndesmotic injury as stable or unstable. Stable injuries should be treated non-operatively with a short-leg cast or brace
Unstable injuries should be managed operatively.
The recommended clinical tests include: tenderness on palpation over the anterior tibiofibular ligament, the fibular translation test and the Cotton test. Radiographic imaging must include an AP view and a mortise view of the syndesmosis to check the tibiofibular clear space, medial clear space overlap, tibial width and fibular width
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #152 y.o. female CFO who presents with left ankle and knee pain. She had a skiing accident where she felt her ski got caught on something and she fell forward. Unfortunately her ski did not pop off and she felt like she twisted her ankle at that time. She has been able to walk but has been very painful for her. She presented to urgent care and was given an Ace wrap after x-rays appeared normal.
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #1
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #1
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #1
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #1
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #227 y.o. female pro soccer player has had chronic deltoid ligament pain. She went up for a header 2 weeks prior to presentation and landed with increased stress on her medial ankle. She has had trouble running since this incident. Of note, she has significant hindfoot valgus. Injured medial ankle last season.
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #2
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #2
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #2
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #365 y.o. male who presents with Left ankle weakness. He had a twisting injury in 2015 and suffered a left anterior process calcaneus fracture. He has continued to have some intermittent weakness and pain. Recent EMG was done concerning for some peroneal neuropathy.
Pain is 0 out of 10 and is not really pain but just weakness.
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Case #3
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
References1. Czajka, C. M., Tran, E., Cai, A. N. & DiPreta, J. A. Ankle sprains and instability. Med. Clin. North Am. 98, 313–329 (2014).
2. Waterman, B. R., Owens, B. D., Davey, S., Zacchilli, M. A. & Belmont, P. J. The epidemiology of ankle sprains in the United States. J. Bone Joint Surg. Am. 92, 2279–2284 (2010).
3. Delahunt, E. et al. Clinical assessment of acute lateral ankle sprain injuries (ROAST): 2019 consensus statement and recommendations of the International Ankle Consortium. Br. J. Sports Med. (2018). doi:10.1136/bjsports-2017-098885
4. Brown, A. J., Shimozono, Y., Hurley, E. T. & Kennedy, J. G. Arthroscopic Repair of Lateral Ankle Ligament for Chronic Lateral Ankle Instability: A Systematic Review. Arthrosc. J. Arthrosc. Relat. Surg. Off. Publ. Arthrosc. Assoc. N. Am. Int. Arthrosc. Assoc. (2018). doi:10.1016/j.arthro.2018.02.034
5. Lai, M. W. W. & Sit, R. W. S. Healing of Complete Tear of the Anterior Talofibular Ligament and Early Ankle Stabilization after Autologous Platelet Rich Plasma: a Case Report and Literature Review. Arch. Bone Jt. Surg. 6, 146–149 (2018).
6. Diallo, J. et al. Intraoperative Findings of Lateral Ligament Avulsion Fractures and Outcome After Refixation to the Fibula. Foot Ankle Int.39, 669–673 (2018).
7. Yasui, Y., Shimozono, Y. & Kennedy, J. G. Surgical Procedures for Chronic Lateral Ankle Instability. J. Am. Acad. Orthop. Surg. 26, 223–230 (2018).
8. Glazebrook, M. et al. Percutaneous Ankle Reconstruction of Lateral Ligaments (Perc-Anti RoLL). Foot Ankle Int. 37, 659–664 (2016).
9. Teramoto, A. et al. Suture-Button Fixation and Mini-Open Anterior Inferior Tibiofibular Ligament Augmentation Using Suture Tape for Tibiofibular Syndesmosis Injuries. J. Foot Ankle Surg. Off. Publ. Am. Coll. Foot Ankle Surg. 57, 159–161 (2018).
10. van Dijk, C. N. et al. Classification and diagnosis of acute isolated syndesmotic injuries: ESSKA-AFAS consensus and guidelines. Knee Surg. Sports Traumatol. Arthrosc. Off. J. ESSKA 24, 1200–1216 (2016).
11. Lötscher, P., Lang, T. H., Zwicky, L., Hintermann, B. & Knupp, M. Osteoligamentous injuries of the medial ankle joint. Eur. J. Trauma Emerg. Surg. Off. Publ. Eur. Trauma Soc. 41, 615–621 (2015).
12. Hintermann, B., Valderrabano, V., Boss, A., Trouillier, H. H. & Dick, W. Medial ankle instability: an exploratory, prospective study of fifty-two cases. Am. J. Sports Med. 32, 183–190 (2004).
EVALUATION & TREATMENT OF THE INJURED ATHLETEADVANCED TOPICS IN SURGERY AND REHABILITATION
Questions?