• BMJ case reports · Jan 2015

    Case Reports

    Subtalar dislocation secondary to a low energy injury.

    • Philip McKeag, Jonathan Lyske, Jonathan Reaney, and Neville Thompson.
    • Altnagelvin Hospital, Londonderry, UK.
    • BMJ Case Rep. 2015 Jan 1;2015.

    AbstractAn 18-year-old young man presented with an ankle injury, after landing on a supinated right foot following jumping while playing football. A plain X-ray revealed a medial subtalar dislocation. Despite obvious ankle deformity, the surrounding skin remained intact. Closed reduction of the subtalar joint was successfully performed under general anaesthesia in theatre. A CT of the ankle, after reduction, demonstrated a non-displaced fracture of the neck of the talus; no osteochondral defect was observed. This was successfully managed conservatively, with immobilisation of the ankle, in a non-weight bearing cast for 6 weeks. This case highlights that subtalar dislocation may follow a low-energy mechanism and that such injuries can be managed without open reduction.2015 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.

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