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Fracture Dislocation clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Fracture Dislocation.

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NCT ID: NCT02374944 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Open Fracture Dislocation, Tarsometatarsal Joint

Fixation Insitu Versus Removal for Midfoot Lisfranc Injuries

FIRM
Start date: January 23, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is a multicenter prospective randomized control trial comparing hardware retention (HR) to removal of hardware (RH).

NCT ID: NCT02245893 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Fracture Dislocation of Ankle Joint

A Prospective Randomized Pilot Study to Compare Open Versus Percutaneous Syndesmosis Repair of Unstable Ankle Fractures

ART
Start date: August 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates fracture healing, anatomic reduction and return to functioning in patients with unstable Weber C type fractures of the ankle. Best outcomes are obtained when a good alignment of the ankle joint is maintained and natural function of the syndesmosis (space between the tibia and fibula bones) is restored. The syndesmosis and ankle joint is stabilized by a series of ligaments which are often damaged in Weber C type fractures. Current syndesmosis repair techniques traverse the tibia and fibula, but do not anatomically reconstruct the ligaments. The investigators will compare reconstruction of the unstable syndesmosis by open reduction and internal fixation using a syndesmosis screw coupled with anterior ligament (AiTFL) anatomic repair technique (ART) to percutaneous repair using a syndemosis screw only (SCREW). Radiographic, pain and functional outcome scores will be compared between the groups using validated outcome measures.

NCT ID: NCT02198768 Completed - Ankle Fractures Clinical Trials

Ankle Fracture vs Ankle Fracture-Dislocation

Start date: September 2012
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to compare outcomes of patients with an ankle fracture to those with ankle fracture-dislocations. We hypothesize that long-term clinical outcomes for patients sustaining ankle fracture dislocations are poorer than those without dislocation.