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Syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) for anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation

Reconstruction of unstable syndesmotic injuries is not trivial, and there is no generally accepted treatment guidelines. Thus, there still remain considerable controversies regarding diagnosis, classification and treatment of syndesmotic injuries. Syndesmotic malreduction is the most common indicati...

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Autores principales: Regauer, Markus, Mackay, Gordon, Lange, Mirjam, Kammerlander, Christian, Böcker, Wolfgang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5396014/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28473957
http://dx.doi.org/10.5312/wjo.v8.i4.301
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author Regauer, Markus
Mackay, Gordon
Lange, Mirjam
Kammerlander, Christian
Böcker, Wolfgang
author_facet Regauer, Markus
Mackay, Gordon
Lange, Mirjam
Kammerlander, Christian
Böcker, Wolfgang
author_sort Regauer, Markus
collection PubMed
description Reconstruction of unstable syndesmotic injuries is not trivial, and there is no generally accepted treatment guidelines. Thus, there still remain considerable controversies regarding diagnosis, classification and treatment of syndesmotic injuries. Syndesmotic malreduction is the most common indication for early re-operation after ankle fracture surgery, and widening of the ankle mortise by only 1 mm decreases the contact area of the tibiotalar joint by 42%. Outcome of ankle fractures with syndesmosis injury is worse than without, even after surgical syndesmotic stabilization. This may be due to a high incidence of syndesmotic malreduction revealed by increasing postoperative computed tomography controls. Therefore, even open visualization of the syndesmosis during the reduction maneuver has been recommended. Thus, the most important clinical predictor of outcome is consistently reported as accuracy of anatomic reduction of the injured syndesmosis. In this context the TightRope(®) system is reported to have advantages compared to classical syndesmotic screws. However, rotational instability of the distal fibula cannot be safely limited by use of 1 or even 2 TightRopes(®). Therefore, we developed a new syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) technique for improved anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation to protect healing of the injured native ligaments. The InternalBrace(TM) technique was developed by Gordon Mackay from Scotland in 2012 using SwiveLocks(®) for knotless aperture fixation of a FiberTape(®) at the anatomic footprints of the augmented ligaments, and augmentation of the anterior talofibular ligament, the deltoid ligament, the spring ligament and the medial collateral ligaments of the knee have been published so far. According to the individual injury pattern, patients can either be treated by the new syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) technique alone as a single anterior stabilization, or in combination with one posteriorly directed TightRope(®) as a double stabilization, or in combination with one TightRope(®) and a posterolateral malleolar screw fixation as a triple stabilization. Moreover, the syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) technique is suitable for anatomic refixation of displaced bony avulsion fragments too small for screw fixation and for indirect reduction of small posterolateral tibial avulsion fragments by anatomic reduction of the anterior syndesmosis with an InternalBrace(TM) after osteosynthesis of the distal fibula. In this paper, comprehensively illustrated clinical examples show that anatomic reconstruction with rotational stabilization of the syndesmosis can be realized by use of our new syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) technique. A clinical trial for evaluation of the functional outcomes has been started at our hospital.
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spelling pubmed-53960142017-05-04 Syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) for anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation Regauer, Markus Mackay, Gordon Lange, Mirjam Kammerlander, Christian Böcker, Wolfgang World J Orthop Therapeutic Advances Reconstruction of unstable syndesmotic injuries is not trivial, and there is no generally accepted treatment guidelines. Thus, there still remain considerable controversies regarding diagnosis, classification and treatment of syndesmotic injuries. Syndesmotic malreduction is the most common indication for early re-operation after ankle fracture surgery, and widening of the ankle mortise by only 1 mm decreases the contact area of the tibiotalar joint by 42%. Outcome of ankle fractures with syndesmosis injury is worse than without, even after surgical syndesmotic stabilization. This may be due to a high incidence of syndesmotic malreduction revealed by increasing postoperative computed tomography controls. Therefore, even open visualization of the syndesmosis during the reduction maneuver has been recommended. Thus, the most important clinical predictor of outcome is consistently reported as accuracy of anatomic reduction of the injured syndesmosis. In this context the TightRope(®) system is reported to have advantages compared to classical syndesmotic screws. However, rotational instability of the distal fibula cannot be safely limited by use of 1 or even 2 TightRopes(®). Therefore, we developed a new syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) technique for improved anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation to protect healing of the injured native ligaments. The InternalBrace(TM) technique was developed by Gordon Mackay from Scotland in 2012 using SwiveLocks(®) for knotless aperture fixation of a FiberTape(®) at the anatomic footprints of the augmented ligaments, and augmentation of the anterior talofibular ligament, the deltoid ligament, the spring ligament and the medial collateral ligaments of the knee have been published so far. According to the individual injury pattern, patients can either be treated by the new syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) technique alone as a single anterior stabilization, or in combination with one posteriorly directed TightRope(®) as a double stabilization, or in combination with one TightRope(®) and a posterolateral malleolar screw fixation as a triple stabilization. Moreover, the syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) technique is suitable for anatomic refixation of displaced bony avulsion fragments too small for screw fixation and for indirect reduction of small posterolateral tibial avulsion fragments by anatomic reduction of the anterior syndesmosis with an InternalBrace(TM) after osteosynthesis of the distal fibula. In this paper, comprehensively illustrated clinical examples show that anatomic reconstruction with rotational stabilization of the syndesmosis can be realized by use of our new syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) technique. A clinical trial for evaluation of the functional outcomes has been started at our hospital. Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2017-04-18 /pmc/articles/PMC5396014/ /pubmed/28473957 http://dx.doi.org/10.5312/wjo.v8.i4.301 Text en ©The Author(s) 2017. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial.
spellingShingle Therapeutic Advances
Regauer, Markus
Mackay, Gordon
Lange, Mirjam
Kammerlander, Christian
Böcker, Wolfgang
Syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) for anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation
title Syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) for anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation
title_full Syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) for anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation
title_fullStr Syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) for anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation
title_full_unstemmed Syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) for anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation
title_short Syndesmotic InternalBrace(TM) for anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation
title_sort syndesmotic internalbrace(tm) for anatomic distal tibiofibular ligament augmentation
topic Therapeutic Advances
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5396014/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28473957
http://dx.doi.org/10.5312/wjo.v8.i4.301
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