• J Orthop Trauma · Feb 2015

    Functional outcomes after tibial shaft fractures treated using the Taylor spatial frame.

    • Daniel J Henderson, Elizabeth Barron, Yvonne Hadland, and Hemant K Sharma.
    • Department of Orthopaedics, Hull Royal Infirmary, Hull, United Kingdom.
    • J Orthop Trauma. 2015 Feb 1; 29 (2): e54-9.

    ObjectivesTo analyze functional and radiologic outcomes of tibial shaft fractures treated with the Taylor spatial frame (TSF).DesignProspective follow-up study of radiologic and functional outcomes.SettingUniversity teaching hospital.PatientsFrom January 2006 to December 2012, prospective data were collected for 56 consecutive patients completing treatment of a tibial shaft fracture with the TSF.InterventionTreatment of tibial shaft fractures, including those with simple extension into the knee or ankle joints, using the TSF.Main Outcome MeasurementsResidual deformity on x-ray and functional outcomes using the EQ-5D health status questionnaire, Iowa Knee and Ankle Evaluation Rating System scores, and Olerud and Molander Ankle score were recorded 1 year after frame removal.ResultsAverage residual deformity was 1.8 degrees in the coronal and 1.6 degrees in the sagittal planes. EQ-5D outcomes showed patients returning to a health status no different from scores for the UK population as a whole. Iowa Knee scores demonstrated "good" or "excellent" outcomes in 87.3% of our cohort (mean, 90). Ankle Evaluation Rating System scores and Olerud and Molander Ankle scores showed "good" or "excellent" outcomes in 76.8% and 89.3% of our cohort, respectively (mean, 84.1 and 84).ConclusionsUse of the TSF for treatment of tibial fractures, with support from a dedicated limb reconstruction rehabilitation team, has a number of technical advantages while producing good functional and surgical outcomes, with patients recovering to a pre-injury health status.Level Of EvidenceTherapeutic Level IV. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

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