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Is Repair of the Superficial Deltoid Ligament Alone Enough to Restore Medial Ankle Stability in Deltoid Ligament Injuries? A Cadaveric Study

CATEGORY: Trauma INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: Deltoid ligament injuries are controversial in many aspects: the best method to assess the stability of a Weber B fibular fracture, the indications of deltoid repair after lateral side surgical fixation, the best technique of deltoid repair and the efficacy of...

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Autor principal: Abd-Ella, Mohamed M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8795061/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011421S00001
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author Abd-Ella, Mohamed M.
author_facet Abd-Ella, Mohamed M.
author_sort Abd-Ella, Mohamed M.
collection PubMed
description CATEGORY: Trauma INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: Deltoid ligament injuries are controversial in many aspects: the best method to assess the stability of a Weber B fibular fracture, the indications of deltoid repair after lateral side surgical fixation, the best technique of deltoid repair and the efficacy of superficial deltoid repair alone, compared to repair of both deep and superficial deltoid ligaments, to restore medial ankle stability. The last point is specifically important because of the technical difficulty of repairing the deep deltoid ligament, specially if performed after fixation of the fibular fracture and the syndesmosis, which is the common scenario. The aim of the study was to evaluate the ability of superficial deltoid repair without deep deltoid repair to restore medial ankle stability in cases of deltoid ligament injuries. METHODS: Ten fresh frozen ankle cadaveric specimens were used. Anteromedial dissection was performed to expose the ankle joint and to visualize the deltoid ligament. After good exposure, stress valgus and stress external rotation tests were performed with observation of the medial gutter and the medial part of the ankle joint for any widening. In all specimens, the ankle was stable at this point. Then, the superficial deltoid ligament was detached by sharp dissection from the medial malleolus followed by transection of the deep deltoid ligament completely at its midportion. Stress valgus and stress external rotation tests were repeated to demonstrate the gross instability of the ankle joint. Then, the superficial deltoid ligament was repaired using a suture anchor to the medial malleolus without any repair of the deep deltoid ligament. Then, stress valgus and stress external rotation tests were performed again to assess the medial ankle stability. RESULTS: All ankles were stable initially as confirmed by stress valgus and stress external rotation tests. After cutting both components of the deltoid ligament, the ankles were found to be grossly unstable using the same tests. After repair of the superficial deltoid, all ankles were stable again with a medial space equal to the initial status and with negative stress valgus and stress external rotation tests. CONCLUSION: Surgical repair of the superficial deltoid ligament without repair of the deep deltoid ligament in cases of deltoid ligament injury may be sufficient to restore medial ankle stability. Limitations of the study include that all potential secondary restraints are intact in the cadaveric study compared to the actual situation where other structures like the capsular attachments may be injured especially if a fracture dislocation is encountered. Clinical trials are needed to confirm this finding.
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spelling pubmed-87950612022-01-28 Is Repair of the Superficial Deltoid Ligament Alone Enough to Restore Medial Ankle Stability in Deltoid Ligament Injuries? A Cadaveric Study Abd-Ella, Mohamed M. Foot Ankle Orthop Article CATEGORY: Trauma INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: Deltoid ligament injuries are controversial in many aspects: the best method to assess the stability of a Weber B fibular fracture, the indications of deltoid repair after lateral side surgical fixation, the best technique of deltoid repair and the efficacy of superficial deltoid repair alone, compared to repair of both deep and superficial deltoid ligaments, to restore medial ankle stability. The last point is specifically important because of the technical difficulty of repairing the deep deltoid ligament, specially if performed after fixation of the fibular fracture and the syndesmosis, which is the common scenario. The aim of the study was to evaluate the ability of superficial deltoid repair without deep deltoid repair to restore medial ankle stability in cases of deltoid ligament injuries. METHODS: Ten fresh frozen ankle cadaveric specimens were used. Anteromedial dissection was performed to expose the ankle joint and to visualize the deltoid ligament. After good exposure, stress valgus and stress external rotation tests were performed with observation of the medial gutter and the medial part of the ankle joint for any widening. In all specimens, the ankle was stable at this point. Then, the superficial deltoid ligament was detached by sharp dissection from the medial malleolus followed by transection of the deep deltoid ligament completely at its midportion. Stress valgus and stress external rotation tests were repeated to demonstrate the gross instability of the ankle joint. Then, the superficial deltoid ligament was repaired using a suture anchor to the medial malleolus without any repair of the deep deltoid ligament. Then, stress valgus and stress external rotation tests were performed again to assess the medial ankle stability. RESULTS: All ankles were stable initially as confirmed by stress valgus and stress external rotation tests. After cutting both components of the deltoid ligament, the ankles were found to be grossly unstable using the same tests. After repair of the superficial deltoid, all ankles were stable again with a medial space equal to the initial status and with negative stress valgus and stress external rotation tests. CONCLUSION: Surgical repair of the superficial deltoid ligament without repair of the deep deltoid ligament in cases of deltoid ligament injury may be sufficient to restore medial ankle stability. Limitations of the study include that all potential secondary restraints are intact in the cadaveric study compared to the actual situation where other structures like the capsular attachments may be injured especially if a fracture dislocation is encountered. Clinical trials are needed to confirm this finding. SAGE Publications 2022-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC8795061/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011421S00001 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Article
Abd-Ella, Mohamed M.
Is Repair of the Superficial Deltoid Ligament Alone Enough to Restore Medial Ankle Stability in Deltoid Ligament Injuries? A Cadaveric Study
title Is Repair of the Superficial Deltoid Ligament Alone Enough to Restore Medial Ankle Stability in Deltoid Ligament Injuries? A Cadaveric Study
title_full Is Repair of the Superficial Deltoid Ligament Alone Enough to Restore Medial Ankle Stability in Deltoid Ligament Injuries? A Cadaveric Study
title_fullStr Is Repair of the Superficial Deltoid Ligament Alone Enough to Restore Medial Ankle Stability in Deltoid Ligament Injuries? A Cadaveric Study
title_full_unstemmed Is Repair of the Superficial Deltoid Ligament Alone Enough to Restore Medial Ankle Stability in Deltoid Ligament Injuries? A Cadaveric Study
title_short Is Repair of the Superficial Deltoid Ligament Alone Enough to Restore Medial Ankle Stability in Deltoid Ligament Injuries? A Cadaveric Study
title_sort is repair of the superficial deltoid ligament alone enough to restore medial ankle stability in deltoid ligament injuries? a cadaveric study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8795061/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011421S00001
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