Fracture in Leg Tibia and Fibula
Fracture in Leg Tibia and Fibula
Fracture in Leg Tibia and Fibula
Computed tomography and MRI usually are generally not necessary. CT may be useful in
metaphyseal fractures if articular extension is suspected.
Technetium bone scanning and MRI scanning may be useful in diagnosing stress fractures
before these injuries become obvious on plain radiographs.
Angiography is indicated if an arterial injury is suspected, based on ankle-branchial indexes
(ABIs) or diminished pulses.
CLASSIFICATION
Poor sensitivity, reproducibility, and interobserver reliability have been reported for most
classification schemes.
Descriptive
Open versus closed
Anatomic location: proximal, middle, or distal third
Fragment number and position: comminution, butterfly fragments
Configuration: transverse, spiral, oblique
Angulation: varus /valgus, anterior/posterior
Shortening
Displacement: percentage of cortical contact
Rotation
Associated injuries
TYPES OF TIBIA – FIBULA
FRACTURES
Cozen’s fractures are most common under the age of 6. This kind of fracture occurs at the top of
the tibia, often when too much pressure is applied to the side of the knee, creating a bending
force.
Toddler fractures typically occur in children under the age of 4. This type of fracture often
happens because the leg twists while the child is stumbling or falling. Toddler fractures occur
near the middle of the tibia and can be difficult to see on an x-ray.
Tibial tubercle fractures typically occur during adolescence. The tibial tubercle is a bony bump
on the upper part of the shin where the quadricep muscle is attached to the bone by the patellar
tendon. A tibial tubercle fracture is a break or crack at this location. It is most common when a
child’s tibial tubercle is growing and the bone around that area is soft. Until the bone becomes
stronger, a strong tug by the tendon can cause this part of the bone to break. This fracture
typically occurs when trying to jump to dunk a basketball ball or do a flip.
GUSTILO AND ANDERSON
CLASSIFICATION OF OPEN FRACTURES
Type I: Clean skin opening of<1 cm, usually from inside to outside;
minimal muscle contusion; simple transverse or short oblique fractures
Type II: Laceration >1cm long, with extensive soft tissue damage;
minimal to moderate crushing component; simple transverse or short
oblique fractures with minimal comminution
Type III: Extensive soft tissue damage, including muscles, skin, and
neurovascular structures; often a high-energy injury with a severe
crushing component
IIIA: Extensive soft tissue laceration, adequate bone coverage; segmental
fractures, gunshot injuries, minimal periosteal stripping
IIIB: Extensive soft tissue injury with periosteal stripping and bone
exposure requiring soft tissue flap closure; usually associated with massive
contamination
IIIC: Vascular injury requiring repair
TSCHERNE CLASSIFICATION OF
CLOSED FRACTURES
This classifies soft tissue injury in closed fractures and takes into account indirect versus direct
injury mechanisms.
Grade 0: Injury from indirect forces with negligible soft tissue damage
Grade I: Closed fracture caused by low-moderate energy mechanisms, with superficial abrasions
or contusions of soft tissues overlying the fracture
Grade II: Closed fracture with significant muscle contusion, with possible deep, contaminated
skin abrasions associated with moderate to severe energy mechanisms and skeletal injury; high
risk for compartment syndrome
Grade III: Extensive crushing of soft tissues, with subcutaneous degloving or avulsion, with
arterial disruption or established compartment syndrome
TREATMENT
Nonoperative
Fracture reduction followed by application of a long leg cast with progressive weight bearing
can be used for isolated, closed, low-energy fractures with minimal displacement and
comminution.
Cast with the knee in 0 to 5 degrees of flexion to allow for weight bearing with crutches as soon
as tolerated by patient, with advancement to full weight bearing by the second to fourth week.
After 3 to 6 weeks, the long leg cast may be exchanged for a patella bearing cast or fracture
brace.
Union rates as high as 97% are reported, although with delayed weight bearing related to
delayed union or nonunion. Hind foot stiffness is the major limitation seen.
TREATMENT (cont.)
Acceptable Fracture Reduction
Less than 5 degrees of varus /valgus angulation is recommended.
Less than 10 degrees of anterior/posterior angulation is recommended (5 degrees preferred).
Less than 10 degrees of rotational deformity is recommended, with external rotation better tolerated than
internal rotation.
Less than 1 cm of shortening; 5 mm of distraction may delay healing 8 to 12 months.
More than 50% cortical contact is recommended.
Roughly, the anterior superior iliac spine, center of the patella, and base of the second proximal phalanx
should be collinear.
Fasciotomy
Evidence of compartment syndrome is an indication for
emergent fasciotomy of all four-muscle compartments of
the leg (anterior, lateral, superficial, and deep posterior)
through one or multiple incision techniques. Following
operative fracture fixation, the fascial openings should not
be reapproximated.
COMPLICATIONS
Malunion: This includes any deformity outside the acceptable range. Seen with Nonoperative
treatments and metaphyseal fractures.
Nonunion: This is associated with high-velocity injuries, open fractures (especially Gustilo
grade III), infection, intact fibula, inadequate fixation, and initial fracture displacement.
Infection (more common following open fracture).
Soft tissue loss: Delaying wound coverage for greater than 7 to 10 days in open fractures has
been associated with higher rates of infection. Local rotational flaps or free flaps may be needed
for adequate coverage.
Stiffness at the knee and or ankle may occur with Nonoperative care.
Knee pain: This is the most common complication associated with IM tibial nailing.
COMPLICATIONS(cont.)
Hardware breakage: Nail and locking screw breakage rates depend on the
size of the nail used and the type of metal from which it is made. Larger
reamed nails have larger cross screws; the incidence of nail and screw
breakage is greater with unreamed nails that utilize smaller-diameter locking
screws.
Reflex sympathetic dystrophy: This is most common in patients unable to
bear weight early and with prolonged cast immobilization. It is characterized
by initial pain and swelling followed by atrophy of limb. Radiographic signs
are spotty demineralization of foot and distal tibia and equinovarus ankle. It
is treated by elastic compression stockings, weight bearing, sympathetic
blocks, and foot orthoses, accompanied by aggressive physical therapy
Fat embolism.
Claw toe deformity: This is associated with scarring of extensor tendons
or ischemia of posterior compartment muscles.
COMPLICATIONS(cont.)