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Ankle Fracture clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Ankle Fracture.

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NCT ID: NCT02863042 Withdrawn - Ankle Fracture Clinical Trials

Is Deltoid Ligament Repair for Ankle Fracture Necessary?

AnkleFX
Start date: May 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigator hypothesizes that primary acute ankle deltoid ligament repair can help restore ankle radiographic congruity and functional outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT02779244 Completed - Ankle Fracture Clinical Trials

Early Weight Bearing for Unstable Ankle Fractures Undergoing Operative Stabilization

Start date: September 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this randomized, controlled trial is to estimate the safety of early weight bearing on post ankle surgery. Patients who are indicated to have surgery for unstable ankle fractures by an attending trauma physician will be consented for participation in the study. After surgery patients will be randomized to either weight bearing as tolerated at two weeks with a cam boot or non-weight bearing with a cam boot. Randomization will be performed by number allocation with odd numbers in the early weight bearing group and even numbers in the non-weight bearing group. The surgeon will be blinded to this until after the surgery. The patients will all be placed in a short leg cast post operative and made non-weight bearing for 2 weeks until sutures are removed which is current standard treatment. Both groups will be asked to initiate weight bearing at two weeks post operatively by wearing a cam boot that is non weight bearing in a cam boot, the latter being standard treatment.

NCT ID: NCT02609347 Completed - Ankle Fracture Clinical Trials

Manual Therapy After Ankle/Hindfoot Fractures

Start date: November 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this randomized controlled trial is to assess if manual therapy improves mobility, gait, and balance more than a control group for patients who have undergone open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) after an ankle/hindfoot fracture.

NCT ID: NCT02480621 Completed - Ankle Fracture Clinical Trials

Liposomal Bupivacaine With Bupivacaine in Ankle Fracture Open Reduction Internal Fixation (ORIF)

Start date: December 2014
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study is a randomized controlled trial assessing pain control in ankle fractures repaired with open reduction and internal fixation. Patients are consented and enrolled pre-operatively, and randomized to either control or liposomal bupivacaine with bupivacaine administered intra-operatively.

NCT ID: NCT02373254 Completed - Ankle Fracture Clinical Trials

NSAIDS Versus Opioids in Acute SER II Ankle Fractures

Start date: January 2015
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This study is being conducted to evaluate whether NSAIDS are more or less effective in bone healing than opioids in acute fracture pain. Participants will be randomized to one of three groups for first line treatment of pain related to the fracture.

NCT ID: NCT02334618 Completed - Ankle Fracture Clinical Trials

Insole Sensor to Determine Optimal Limb Loading in the Rehabilitation of Ankle Fractures

Start date: August 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to use a novel load monitoring technology to correlate limb loading to ankle fracture outcomes. This study will collect continuous limb loading data and will provide the first objective insight into how limb loading directs fracture healing.

NCT ID: NCT02072135 Completed - Ankle Fracture Clinical Trials

Exparel and Ankle Surgery

Start date: February 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study involves a drug called Exparel that has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), for application directly to wound sites. EXPAREL® is a long acting pain reliever. It is being given in this study to see if it provides safe and effective pain relief after ankle surgery. Because it is a long acting drug, it may lessen pain relief for as much as 72 hours after surgery. EXPAREL® has not been approved by the FDA for administration by popliteal block, which is the method the study doctors will use to give the patients the drug. Giving the drug by popliteal block involves inserting a small tube in to the back of the knee to deliver the drug. The study doctors wish to determine if patients undergoing ankle surgery and receiving this drug have less pain and less need for narcotic medication.

NCT ID: NCT02032966 Active, not recruiting - Ankle Fracture Clinical Trials

Surgical Versus Nonsurgical Treatment of Fibular Fractures: A Prospective Randomized Study

Start date: April 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Isolated surgical repair of the inside portion of the tibia may be enough to stabilize an ankle fracture in which both the tibia and the fibula are broken. This would alleviate the need for another incision, plate, and screws to repair the fibula. The purpose of this study is to help determine if surgically repairing only the tibia fracture will lead to equivalent clinical outcomes when compared with surgical repair of both bones. The hypothesis of this study is that operative stabilization of the medial malleolus fracture only, in otherwise ligamentously stable bimalleolar and/or trimalleolar fractures of the ankle, will lead to equivalent clinical outcomes and functional scores as those treated with operative stabilization of both malleoli and/or all malleoli.

NCT ID: NCT02029170 Recruiting - Rehabilitation Clinical Trials

Early Weightbearing Versus Non-weightbearing After Operative Treatment of an Ankle Fracture

Start date: January 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Unstable ankle fractures are commonly treated operatively. After operative reduction and fixation of the fractures, there are varying rehabilitation regimes that include non-weightbearing for 6 weeks with active range of motion exercise in a removal cast or brace, or early protected weightbearing in a rigid cast. Several papers reported that early weightbearing may decrease ankle stiffness, muscle and bone atrophy, and aids in early return to activities. However, early weightbearing may have the risk of displacement of the fixed fractures. Rehabilitation after operative treatment of an ankle fracture is still not clear. We hypothesized that the ankle function assessed on 12 months after operation of an ankle fracture with early weightbearing is not inferior to non-weightbearing but is superior to non-weightbearing with respect to time to return to normal daily life and time to full weightbearing.

NCT ID: NCT01729195 Completed - Ankle Fracture Clinical Trials

Ankle Syndesmosis Fixation by Antibiotic Releasing Bioabsorbable Screw

Start date: March 2006
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This single-center randomized trial evaluates the efficacy and safety of a new bone screw (antibiotic releasing bioabsorbable screw) in fixation of syndesmosis in patients with Weber C-type ankle fractures. The comparison is made to subjects treated by conventional metal screw fixation of the syndesmosis. The primary objective is to show that the antibiotic releasing bioabsorbable screw is at least as good as the routinely used metal screw in prevention of syndesmosis widening in patients with Weber C-type ankle fractures. The secondary objective is to show that the clinical outcome of the ankle fracture treatment is equal between patients treated by the antibiotic releasing bioabsorbable screw and the conventional metal screw.