Talus Fracture Clinical Trial
— TTF2017Official title:
Long-term Radiographic and Clinical-functional Outcomes of Isolated, Displaced, Closed Talar Neck and Body Fractures Treated by Open Reduction Iternal Fixation: the Timing of Surgical Management.
Verified date | August 2018 |
Source | University of Padua |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational |
The main purpose of this retrospective case series study was to evaluate long-term radiographic and clinical outcomes of a consecutive series of patients with diagnosis of isolated, displaced, closed talar neck or body fractures treated by open reduction and internal fixation. Secondly, it was aimed to verify the influence of the location of talar fractures on the outcomes, the prognostic value of the Hawkins sign, whether operative delays promote avascular necrosis (AVN) and if the fractures require emergent surgical management.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 40 |
Est. completion date | February 28, 2018 |
Est. primary completion date | December 31, 2012 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 85 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - diagnosis of a closed, isolated, displaced talar neck or body fracture with 2 or more millimetres displacement, subsequently treated by ORIF - age between 18 and 85 years - informed consent to participate. Exclusion Criteria: - undisplaced fractures or involvement of both the neck and the body, - open fractures, talar head and peripheral fractures including posterior process, osteochondral fractures, primary arthrodesis or amputation, - history of severe neurological deficit, - previous foot surgery or trauma, - diagnosis of rheumathological diseases or psoriatic arthritis, foot neuropathy, severe vascular insufficiency and alcohol or drug abuse. |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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University of Padua |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Evaluation of the quality reduction after surgery | Radiographic examination of anteroposterior, lateral and oblique view radiographs enabled to evaluate the quality of the reduction. Any offset of more than 2 mm or neck angulation of more than 5° between the fragment was labelled as a poor reduction. | at day 1 after surgery | |
Primary | Evaluation of bone healing | Criteria to define bone healing and union: The bridging bone/callus formation was evaluated on radiographs The absence of radiolucent lines was verified at different follow-ups. |
at different follow-ups (1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 12 months, 24 months) | |
Primary | Evaluation of osteonecrosis | The Hawkins sign appearance (only on the A/P X-ray), which resembles a subchondral atrophy in the talus dome, was evaluated indicating that the talus is well vascularized. On the contrary, its absence at this time suggests the presence of osteonecrosis | at 6-8 weeks after injury | |
Primary | Evaluation of the development of post-injury peritalar osteoarthritis | Post-injury peritalar osteoarthritis was evaluated on X-ray and differentiated between necrosis without collapse (sclerosis with and without geodes) and necrosis with collapse of the talar dome at the last follow-up | at last follow-up (seven years) | |
Secondary | American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS) Ankle-Hindfoot score | The AOFAS score enabled to quantify pain and functional disability. It includes 9 questions related to pain (1 question; 40 points), function (7 questions; 50 points) and alignment (10 questions; 10 points); a score of 90-100 is considered an excellent result; 75-89 as good; 50-74 as fair and less than 49 points is considered a failure or a poor outcome. | at last follow-up (seven years) | |
Secondary | the Maryland Foot Score (MFS) | The MFS is a score conceptually analogous to AOFAS score, but points are differently distributed (45 for pain, 55 for functional limitation); they indicate excellent results if the score is between 90 to 100, good for a score of 75 to 89, fair for a score of 50 to 74 and poor if the score is < 50. | at last follow-up (seven years) | |
Secondary | the 17-Foot Functional Index (FFI-17) | The FFI-17 measures the persistence of pain, disability and restriction of activity, with 17 number-rating scales from 0 to 10. The maximum score is 100, which indicates complete disability. | at last follow-up (seven years) |
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