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Research

ACTIVITY LEVEL AFTER LATERAL ANKLE LIGAMENT RECONSTRUCTION USING GRACILIS AUTOGRAFT

The 27th Annual Meeting of the European Orthopaedic Research Society (EORS), Maastricht, The Netherlands, 2–4 October 2019.



Abstract

Limited information is published regarding the activity level after gracilis autograft reconstruction, and usually a knee-injury based score is used rather than a specific ankle PROM. The purpose of this study was to investigate the activity level and functional results after lateral ankle gracilis autograft reconstruction in patients with severe lateral ankle instability. The hypothesis was that patients would regain their pre-injury Tegner activity level or one level below and secondary to compare a specific ankle activity score, instability and function score. Finally, donor site and graft complications, clinical stability and range of motion were measured.

All 69 patients (50 women, 19 men) recorded at the hospital with severe instability who underwent reconstruction of the anterior talofibular and the calcaneofibular ligament with a gracilis autograft and were minimum 6 months post-operative, were invited to participate in the study. Outcomes measures included the Tegner Activity level (1–10), Ankle Activity Score (0–10) recorded as pre-injury and at follow up. The Karlsson Petterson Ankle Function Score (0–100) and Visual Analog Score (VAS)(0–10) recorded pre-operatively and at follow up. All pre-injury and pre-operative data were recalled retrospectively from memory. Identification of functional ankle instability (IDFAI)(0–37) was recorded at follow up. The clinical tests, Anterior drawer test (0–4), Talar tilt test (0–4) and Range of motion (ROM)(degrees) were compared to the unaffected side at follow up. A difference of 1 in the activity scores was chosen as a clinical relevant difference. Data was tested for normal distribution and for statistical significant difference with a students t-test. study design: Cross sectional clinical study with a retrospective questionnaire.

A total of 33 patients (27 women, 6 men), with a mean age on 45 years (range 19–68), were included in this study. Mean follow up was 3.7 years. Mean pre-operative Tegner score was 5.8 vs 5.6 at follow up (p

On average, the patients returned to their pre-injury activity level, with similar specific ankle activity scores to the Tegner. The majority had good functional results and few residual symptoms of functional instability. The response rate was low with few men responding; hence a prospective study is called for to establish the true effect of the surgical technique.


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