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Percent Weightbearing in Foot and Ankle X-rays

CATEGORY: Other; Ankle; Hindfoot; Midfoot/Forefoot INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: Weightbearing x-rays remain standard of care in diagnosing and evaluating foot and ankle injuries and are crucial for clinicians to evaluate foot alignment and ligamentous injuries. Failure for patients to place adequate body w...

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Autores principales: Martella, Jessica, Chen, Jie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9673579/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011421S00776
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author Martella, Jessica
Chen, Jie
author_facet Martella, Jessica
Chen, Jie
author_sort Martella, Jessica
collection PubMed
description CATEGORY: Other; Ankle; Hindfoot; Midfoot/Forefoot INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: Weightbearing x-rays remain standard of care in diagnosing and evaluating foot and ankle injuries and are crucial for clinicians to evaluate foot alignment and ligamentous injuries. Failure for patients to place adequate body weight on x-ray may produce a radiograph that inaccurately demonstrates foot alignment and injury. The objective of the study was to evaluate the percentage of body weight a patient puts on his/her foot during weight bearing x-ray. METHODS: Study participants (n= 278) included patients requiring a clinically indicated x-ray. They were asked to place body weight on foot/ankle during x-ray. The radiograph categories included: lateral foot, AP ankle, oblique ankle and lateral ankle. The scale was concealed from patients and wrapped in a pad and placed on platform as to avoid any bias. The scale measured the weight each patient placed on their foot during each radiograph. The scale was connected to Bluetooth and data was recorded on computer during imaging. The percent of body weight placed on x-ray was calculated using weight during radiograph and weight measured in clinic. RESULTS: Acute injury was defined as pain/injury of duration less than or equal to 3 months with chronic being pain greater than 3 months. Percent bodyweight data in both acute and chronic groups is as follows. Lateral foot acute: mean= 47.39%, max=84.94%, median=46.90%, min= 6.25%; lateral foot chronic: mean=54.80%, max =99.87%, median=54.44%, min=11.56%. AP ankle acute: mean= 56.74%, max=99.51%, median=56.36%, min=6.63%; AP ankle chronic: mean=58.90%, max=97.90%, median=58.42%, min=11.58%. Oblique ankle acute: mean=57.68%, max=98.32%, median=57.40%, min =6.27%; oblique ankle chronic: mean=58.91%, max=96.15%, median=58.46%, min=17.17%. Lateral ankle acute: mean= 50.42%, max=97.92%, median=50.41%, min=11.52%; lateral ankle chronic: mean= 50.03%, max=82.12%, median=50.32%, min=14.10%. Please see attached graphs. CONCLUSION: Preliminary data suggests patients are not placing full body weight during weightbearing x-ray (lateral foot, AP ankle, oblique ankle, lateral ankle). In lateral foot x-rays, patients with acute injuries place less weight during x-ray as compared with patients of chronic conditions (p=0.02). In the categories of AP ankle, oblique ankle and lateral ankle x-rays, the difference in means between acute/chronic was not statistically significant. We plan to further analyze the data to determine how injury type and time since injury changes the percent body weight placed on foot during x-ray as this may affect how patients are diagnosed via radiographs.FIG
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spelling pubmed-96735792022-11-19 Percent Weightbearing in Foot and Ankle X-rays Martella, Jessica Chen, Jie Foot Ankle Orthop Article CATEGORY: Other; Ankle; Hindfoot; Midfoot/Forefoot INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: Weightbearing x-rays remain standard of care in diagnosing and evaluating foot and ankle injuries and are crucial for clinicians to evaluate foot alignment and ligamentous injuries. Failure for patients to place adequate body weight on x-ray may produce a radiograph that inaccurately demonstrates foot alignment and injury. The objective of the study was to evaluate the percentage of body weight a patient puts on his/her foot during weight bearing x-ray. METHODS: Study participants (n= 278) included patients requiring a clinically indicated x-ray. They were asked to place body weight on foot/ankle during x-ray. The radiograph categories included: lateral foot, AP ankle, oblique ankle and lateral ankle. The scale was concealed from patients and wrapped in a pad and placed on platform as to avoid any bias. The scale measured the weight each patient placed on their foot during each radiograph. The scale was connected to Bluetooth and data was recorded on computer during imaging. The percent of body weight placed on x-ray was calculated using weight during radiograph and weight measured in clinic. RESULTS: Acute injury was defined as pain/injury of duration less than or equal to 3 months with chronic being pain greater than 3 months. Percent bodyweight data in both acute and chronic groups is as follows. Lateral foot acute: mean= 47.39%, max=84.94%, median=46.90%, min= 6.25%; lateral foot chronic: mean=54.80%, max =99.87%, median=54.44%, min=11.56%. AP ankle acute: mean= 56.74%, max=99.51%, median=56.36%, min=6.63%; AP ankle chronic: mean=58.90%, max=97.90%, median=58.42%, min=11.58%. Oblique ankle acute: mean=57.68%, max=98.32%, median=57.40%, min =6.27%; oblique ankle chronic: mean=58.91%, max=96.15%, median=58.46%, min=17.17%. Lateral ankle acute: mean= 50.42%, max=97.92%, median=50.41%, min=11.52%; lateral ankle chronic: mean= 50.03%, max=82.12%, median=50.32%, min=14.10%. Please see attached graphs. CONCLUSION: Preliminary data suggests patients are not placing full body weight during weightbearing x-ray (lateral foot, AP ankle, oblique ankle, lateral ankle). In lateral foot x-rays, patients with acute injuries place less weight during x-ray as compared with patients of chronic conditions (p=0.02). In the categories of AP ankle, oblique ankle and lateral ankle x-rays, the difference in means between acute/chronic was not statistically significant. We plan to further analyze the data to determine how injury type and time since injury changes the percent body weight placed on foot during x-ray as this may affect how patients are diagnosed via radiographs.FIG SAGE Publications 2022-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9673579/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011421S00776 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
Martella, Jessica
Chen, Jie
Percent Weightbearing in Foot and Ankle X-rays
title Percent Weightbearing in Foot and Ankle X-rays
title_full Percent Weightbearing in Foot and Ankle X-rays
title_fullStr Percent Weightbearing in Foot and Ankle X-rays
title_full_unstemmed Percent Weightbearing in Foot and Ankle X-rays
title_short Percent Weightbearing in Foot and Ankle X-rays
title_sort percent weightbearing in foot and ankle x-rays
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9673579/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011421S00776
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