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Sports and recreation activity of varus and valgus ankle osteoarthritis before and after realignment surgery
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 1193295
Author(s) Pagenstert, Geert; Leumann, André; Hintermann, Beat; Valderrabano, Victor
Author(s) at UniBasel Hintermann, Beat
Valderrabano, Victor
Year 2008
Title Sports and recreation activity of varus and valgus ankle osteoarthritis before and after realignment surgery
Journal Foot and ankle international
Volume 29
Number 10
Pages / Article-Number 985-93
Abstract BACKGROUND: Realignment-surgery to unload ankle osteoarthritis (OA) has been proposed as treatment alternative for varus and valgus ankle OA. Sports activity after this procedure has not been analyzed. Realignment-surgery increases sports activity. Sports activity correlates with ankle pain, function, and alignment, but does not influence revision rate. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Prospective case series of 35 consecutive patients with post-traumatic varus or valgus ankle OA limited to half tibiotalar joint surface were treated by OA unloading realignment-surgery. Distal tibia osteotomy was used in all cases; additional osteotomies, tendon, ligament procedures in 92% of cases. Main Outcome Measurements: Pain (visual-analogue-scale; VAS), ankle range-of-motion (ROM); function (American-Orthopaedic-Foot-and-Ankle-Society (AOFAS) ankle-score; Swiss-symptom-related-Ankle-Activity-Scale (SAAS); Sports-Frequency-Score (SFS), OA and tibiotalar-alignment-grade (Takakura-Score), and revision surgery. Mean followup was 5 years. RESULTS: Mean values from preoperative to followup: VAS decreased (p = 0.0001) 4 points; ankle ROM increased (p = 0.001) 5 degrees; AOFAS-Score increased (p = 0.0001) 46 points; SAAS increased (p = 0.0001) 42 points; SFS increased (p = 0.02) 0.5 grades; Takakura-score decreased (p = 0.0001) 1.0 grades. Revision surgery was performed in 10 cases (29%). Three of these were revised to ankle arthroplasty. At follow-up, SAAS correlated with VAS, AOFAS score, Takakura score, and not with ROM or SFS. SFS did not correlate with other variables. Patients needing revision surgery had a higher (p = 0.003) SFS than patients who needed no revision. CONCLUSION: Realignment-surgery increased sports activity of ankle OA patients. Improved ankle pain and function correlated with ability to perform activity without symptoms; however, sports frequency had no correlation to patients' symptoms but showed higher revision rate.
Publisher Williams and Wilkins
ISSN/ISBN 1071-1007
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6003538
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.3113/FAI.2008.0985
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18851814
ISI-Number WOS:000259719800004
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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