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Intraoperative Assessment of Reduction of the Ankle Syndesmosis
Authors:Kevin A. Hao  Robert A. Vander Griend  Jennifer A. Nichols  Christopher W. Reb
Affiliation:1.College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL USA ;2.Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL USA ;3.Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL USA ;4.Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Pennsylvania State University, 500 University Dr., Hershey, PA 17033 USA
Abstract:Purpose of ReviewPostoperative malreduction of the ankle syndesmosis is common, poorly defined, and its assessment is controversial. In the absence of a gold standard method to evaluate the ankle syndesmosis, a variety of techniques have been described. As the knowledgebase expands, data illustrating caveats for such techniques has become available. The purpose of this review is to highlight literature-sourced technical pearls and their related caveats for the intraoperative assessment of the ankle syndesmosis.Recent FindingsAlthough numerical criteria are commonly used to assess syndesmotic reduction, anatomical variation in the healthy population frequently exceeds proposed cutoffs. Patient-specific uninjured anatomy can be defined by comparing to the uninjured contralateral ankle; however, side-to-side variation is present for many anatomical relationships. Advanced imaging (e.g., lateral radiographs, 3-dimensional radiography) can influence intraoperative surgeon decision-making and improve syndesmosis reduction, but minute improvements in syndesmosis reduction may not outweigh increased operating time and costs. Intraoperative imaging is an adjunct, not a replacement for direct visualization or palpation when reducing the syndesmosis. Arthroscopy may benefit younger patients with high physical demands by improving identification of intra-articular pathology absent on MRI. Although anatomical reduction is important to restore pre-injury biomechanics, it is unclear whether differences in reduction quality influence patient-reported outcomes.SummaryIn the absence of a gold standard, awareness of the options for intraoperative assessment of the syndesmosis and their respective accuracy and limitations reported herein could enhance surgeons’ ability to intraoperatively reduce the syndesmosis with the tools currently available.
Keywords:Tibiofibular syndesmosis   Malreduction   Radiograph   Radiography   Fluoroscopy   Computed tomography
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