Lauge Hansen SER Supination External Rotation Eversion Ankle Fracture
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Surgery of the Foot and Ankle: http://astore.amazon.com/nichogiovi-20 • Popular Running Shoes: http://astore.amazon.com/nichogiovi-2... • With the foot in a fixed supinated position the forces start along the lateral axis of the fibula. The leg undergoes an internal rotation creating tension on the anterior inferior tibio-fibular ligament. In a Stage 1 injury, one of two pathologies may occur; rupture of the anterior inferior tibio-fibular ligament or a fracture of the distal lateral tibia (aka Tillaux-chaput fracture). • As the leg continues to internally rotate the talus collides with the distal fibula, creating a spiral fracture of the fibula beginning at the level of the syndesmosis. This describes a Stage 2 injury, which is the most commonly encountered ankle fracture. A Wagstaffe fracture can also occur during this stage. • As the force progresses a Stage 3 injury will either involve a rupture of the posterior tibio-fibular ligament or fracture of the posterior malleolus of the tibia (aka Volkman's fracture). • • Supination external rotation injuries that reach stage 3 rarely stop at this point and usually progresses to the final stage. Continued unrestrained lateral rotation of the talus will result in a Stage 4 injury involving either a rupture of the deltoid ligament complex or a transverse fracture of the medial malleolus. • • (Take home points) • -The injury begins along the lateral axis of the fibula. • -The spiral fracture seen in stage 2 is unique to supination-external rotation injuries. • Project Leads: • William Hoffman • Hummira Hassani • Contributing Authors: • Julia Bernardini • Scott Crismon • Technical Advisor: • Thomas Vitale • Narration: • Matrona Giakoumis • Producer: • Nicholas Giovinco • © 2010 • www.DrGlass.org • [email protected]
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