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Ankle Fractures clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Ankle Fractures.

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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: NCT01758796 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Lateral Malleolus Fracture

A Noninferiority RCT Comparing Operative vs Nonoperative Treatment for ER-stress Positive Weber-B Unimalleolar Fractures

Start date: January 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Current gold standard treatment for unstable (those found unstable in external rotation (ER) stress testing Weber B-type, Lauge-Hansen supination-external rotation type IV) ankle fractures is open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) with semitubular plates and screws. However, there is some preliminary evidence to suggest that these type of fibula fractures can be managed non-operatively with comparable functional outcome. The aim of this randomized, non-inferiority trial is to assess whether non-operative treatment (cast immobilisation) yields a non-inferior functional outcome compared to surgery with no excess harms (primarily, fracture and wound healing problems and infection).