Foot & ankle international
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There is both increased interest and awareness in diabetes-associated Charcot foot arthropathy. The number of affected patients will likely increase as the incidence of both diabetes and morbid obesity increases. Many experts now favor surgical correction of the deformity rather than longitudinal management with accommodative bracing. In patients with open wounds and exposed bone and/or chronic osteomyelitis, it is controversial whether resolution of the bony infection should be achieved before attempting surgical correction of the acquired deformity. ⋯ A plantigrade noninfected foot can be achieved in patients with infected diabetic Charcot foot deformity with single-stage radical resection of osteomyelitis, correction of the deformity, maintenance of the correction with static external fixation, and culture-specific antibiotic therapy.
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The purpose of this study was to retrospectively evaluate patients who had open reduction and external fixation of displaced intra-articular calcaneal fractures with supercutaneous calcaneal locking plates used as external fixators. ⋯ Using a supercutaneous calcaneal locking plate to treat calcaneal fractures caused limited tissue irritation, a low rate of local skin infection, satisfactory reduction of the articular surface, stable fixation, and an overall reduced cost.
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To our knowledge, there are only a few prospective studies on the use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to diagnose injuries associated with ankle sprains in children. We hypothesized that MRI examinations of acute ankle sprains in growing children would show relevant injuries that may have been overlooked by conventional clinical, radiological, and ultrasound examinations. ⋯ The injury patterns diagnosed through MRI examination did not correlate with clinical findings. With adequate progressive rehabilitation, the pathological changes diagnosed with MRI healed without further complications. MRI examinations of acute ankle distortion injuries in children did not result in any additional therapeutic value. Therefore, we believe conventional clinical, radiological, and ultrasound diagnostic methods are sufficient for the primary diagnosis of ankle fractures and ankle ligament injuries in children.