Foot & ankle international
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Review Case Reports
Arthroscopic removal of an osteoid osteoma of the talus: a case report.
This article describes a patient with a 10-year history of persistent ankle pain. Differential diagnosis included osteoid osteoma and anterior ankle impingement. ⋯ The use of a motorized instrument for excision did not preclude pathologic evaluation of the specimen. Therefore, in an accessible location on the talar neck, arthroscopic excision of an osteoid osteoma can be performed.
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Review Case Reports
Salter-Harris type IV epiphyseal fracture of the proximal phalanx of the great toe: a case report.
Epiphyseal fractures account for about one fifth of pediatric fractures. Approximately 10% cause major growth disturbances, depending on the location and type of the fracture and the skeletal maturity of the child. Intraarticular Salter-Harris type IV fractures are rare, carry a poor prognosis, and almost always need surgical reduction to prevent deformity. We present a case report of a pediatric patient who returned to normal function after the successful surgical reduction of a Salter-Harris type IV fracture in the proximal phalanx of the great toe.
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Eighteen patients with ankle injuries presenting as short oblique fractures of the distal fibula with no clinical or radiographic evidence of injury to the medial ankle were studied for fracture displacement. Plain radiographs and computed tomography were used for analysis. All fractures were clinically diagnosed as supination-external rotation stage 2 (SE-II) injuries under the Lauge-Hansen scheme. ⋯ In the majority of patients, the relationship between the talus and distal fibula also appeared undisturbed, with fracture displacement being confined to a change in position of the proximal fibular fragment relative to the tibia as compared with the contralateral ankle. In a minority of cases, in addition to the above-described displacement of the proximal fibular fragment, the distal fibular fragment was noted to shift slightly laterally relative to the talus, with mild widening of the lateral joint space. Occult-associated avulsion fractures off the distal tibia were present in 39% of the cases.