Lubberts Bart, Vopat Bryan G, Wolf Jonathon C, Longo Umile Giuseppe, DiGiovanni Christopher W, Guss Daniel
Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Service, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, United States.
Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Kansas Medical Center, United States.
Injury. 2017 Nov;48(11):2433-2437. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2017.08.066. Epub 2017 Aug 31.
Appropriate management of ankle syndesmotic instability is needed to prevent the development of complications. Previous biomechanical studies have evaluated movement of the fibula after screw or suture button fixations with different results, most likely being caused by variations in experimental setups that did not mirror the in vivo clinical setting. This study aimed to arthroscopically compare in a cadaveric model the stability of syndesmotic fixation with either a suture button or syndesmotic screw.
Eight fresh matched pairs of human ankle cadaver specimens (above knee) underwent arthroscopic assessment with (1) intact ligaments, (2) after complete disruption, and (3) after repair with either a quadracortical syndesmotic screw or suture button construct. In every stage, four loading conditions were considered under 100N of direct force: 1) unstressed, 2) lateral hook test, 3) anterior to posterior (AP) translation test, and 4) posterior to anterior (PA) translation test. Coronal plane tibiofibular diastasis, as well as sagittal plane tibiofibular translation, were arthroscopically measured.
Coronal plane anterior and posterior tibiofibular diastasis and sagittal plane tibiofibular translation were measured using probes of increasing diameters. Following screw fixation, syndesmotic stability was similar to the uninjured syndesmosis in the coronal plane (anterior, median 0.0mm [IQR 0.0-0.3] vs. 0.3mm [IQR 0.2-0.3]; p=0.57; posterior, median 0.1mm [IQR 0.0-0.4] vs. 0.2mm [IQR 0.1-0.3]; p=1.0) but more rigid in the sagittal plane (median 0.0mm [IQR 0.0-0.1] vs. 1.0mm [IQR 0.4-1.5]; p=0.012). Repairing the unstable syndesmosis with a suture button construct resulted in coronal plane stability similar to the uninjured syndesmosis (anterior, median 0.2mm [IQR 0.1-0.3] vs. 0.2mm [IQR 0.1-0.3]; p=0.48; posterior, median 0.2mm [IQR 0.1-0.3] vs. 0.3mm [IQR 0.1-0.5]; p=0.44). However, sagittal plane fibular motion remained unstable as compared to the uninjured syndesmosis (median 2.2mm [IQR 1.6-2.6] vs. 0.8mm [IQR 0.4-1.3]; p=0.012).
Current fixation methods for syndesmotic disruption maintain coronal plane fibular stability. Screw and suture button constructs, however, respectively resulted in greater or insufficient constraint to fibular motion in the sagittal plane as compared to the intact syndesmotic ligament. These findings suggest that neither traditional screw nor suture button fixations optimally stabilize the syndesmosis, which may have implications for postoperative care and clinical outcomes.
需要对踝关节下胫腓联合不稳定进行恰当处理,以防止并发症的发生。以往的生物力学研究评估了使用螺钉或缝线纽扣固定后腓骨的运动情况,结果各异,很可能是由于实验设置的差异未能反映体内临床情况所致。本研究旨在通过关节镜在尸体模型中比较缝线纽扣与下胫腓联合螺钉在下胫腓联合固定中的稳定性。
八对新鲜匹配的人踝关节尸体标本(膝关节以上)接受关节镜评估,评估内容包括:(1)韧带完整时;(b)完全断裂后;(3)用四层皮质下下胫腓联合螺钉或缝线纽扣结构修复后。在每个阶段,在100N直接力下考虑四种加载情况:1)无应力;2)外侧钩试验;3)前后(AP)平移试验;4)后前(PA)平移试验。通过关节镜测量冠状面胫腓骨间隙以及矢状面胫腓骨平移情况。
使用直径逐渐增大的探针测量冠状面前后胫腓骨间隙以及矢状面胫腓骨平移情况。螺钉固定后,下胫腓联合在冠状面的稳定性与未受伤的下胫腓联合相似(前方,中位数0.0mm [四分位间距0.0 - 0.3] 对比0.3mm [四分位间距0.2 - 0.3];p = 0.57;后方,中位数0.1mm [四分位间距0.0 - 0.4] 对比0.2mm [四分位间距0.1 - 0.3];p = 1.0),但在矢状面更稳定(中位数0.0mm [四分位间距0.0 - 0.1] 对比1.0mm [四分位间距0.4 - 1.5];p = 0.012)。用缝线纽扣结构修复不稳定的下胫腓联合,其冠状面稳定性与未受伤的下胫腓联合相似(前方,中位数0.2mm [四分位间距0.1 - 0.3] 对比0.2mm [四分位间距0.1 - 0.3];p = 0.48;后方,中位数0.2mm [四分位间距0.1 - 0.3] 对比0.3mm [四分位间距0.1 - 0.5];p = 0.44)。然而,与未受伤的下胫腓联合相比,矢状面腓骨运动仍不稳定(中位数2.2mm [四分位间距1.6 - 2.6] 对比0.8mm [四分位间距0.4 - 1.3];p = 0.012)。
目前下胫腓联合损伤的固定方法可维持冠状面腓骨稳定性。然而,与完整的下胫腓联合韧带相比,螺钉和缝线纽扣结构分别导致矢状面腓骨运动的约束过大或不足。这些发现表明,传统的螺钉和缝线纽扣固定均不能最佳地稳定下胫腓联合,这可能对术后护理和临床结果产生影响。