The timing of ankle fracture surgery and the effect on infectious complications; a case series and systematic review of the literature

Tim Schepers, Mark R De Vries, Esther M M Van Lieshout, Maarten Van der Elst, Tim Schepers, Mark R De Vries, Esther M M Van Lieshout, Maarten Van der Elst

Abstract

Purpose: Information about the influence of delayed surgery on infectious wound complications is ambiguous. A clinical audit was performed to test the hypothesis that early surgery lowers the rate of infectious wound complications. Secondly we looked at the influence of surgical delay and complications on patient reported functional outcome.

Methods: All consecutive, closed distal fibular fractures treated surgically with a plate were included and retrospectively analysed for the delay in operation and wound complications. In a second cohort of patients with a AO-Weber B-type ankle fracture outcome was measured using the Olerud-Molander ankle score (OMAS), the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society score (AOFAS) and a visual analog score (VAS) for overall satisfaction.

Results: Patients treated within one day experienced no wound complications (zero out of 60), whereas in the delayed group 11% (16/145) did (p = 0.004). A similar significant difference was found for the patients treated within one week (2/98) versus after one week (14/107). A systematic review of the literature showed a difference in wound complications of 3.6% (early) versus 12.9% (late) (p < 0.0001). After 43 months, the median AOFAS was 11.5 points lower in the complication group, the OMAS 10 points, and the VAS 0.5 points, with all differences being statistically significant.

Conclusions: Every effort should be made to operate on closed ankle fractures as soon as reasonably possible. A delay in surgery is associated with a significant rise in infectious wound complications, which significantly lowers outcome and patient satisfaction. These fractures should preferably be treated within the first day.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Kaplan-Meier plot of complications in relation to delay. Cumulative number of patients with an infectious wound complication in relation to surgical delay for the total study sample (a), and the difference in events in unimalleolar and bi- or trimalleolar fractures (b)

Source: PubMed

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