Complications, Vol. 2, Pages 28: Early Results Utilizing a Novel Fibular Nail for Surgical Fixation of Ankle Fractures—A Retrospective Case Series
Complications doi: 10.3390/complications2040028
Authors:
Julia E. Ralph
Crystal Jing
Albert T. Anastasio
Samuel B. Adams
Ankle fractures are extremely common and often require surgical management, historically with open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF), although fibular intramedullary nailing (IMN) has demonstrated promising results in recent years. The purpose of this study is to report on risk factors, quality of reduction, and complications in a series of patients undergoing fibular IMN for management of ankle fractures using a novel device via a retrospective case series. Patients undergoing locked fibular IMN with the Flex-Thread nail (Conventus Flower Orthopedics, Horsham, PA, USA) by a single surgeon from January 2023 to March 2025 were included, with at least 6 months of follow-up. Demographics, comorbidities, injury characteristics, reduction quality, and post-operative complications were recorded. Descriptive analyses were reported for categorical variables. A total of 15 patients were included, with a mean age of 58.9 ± 22.0 (range 18–91) and mean BMI of 31.5 ± 5.7 kg/m2. All patients experienced a fall as their mechanism of injury, with 12 Weber B and 3 Weber C fractures. The mean time to surgery from the date of injury was 9.5 ± 5.5 days. Of 15 patients, 66.7% had good reduction quality, 26.7% had fair, and 1 patient experienced poor reduction quality requiring subsequent hardware removal. There was one patient who experienced delayed wound healing. Patients undergoing fibular fixation using the novel Flex-Thread nail experience a fair to good quality of reduction, with limited complications. Both young and elderly patients have relatively positive early post-operative outcomes. Additional research with longer-term follow-up will be required to confirm its efficacy.
Source link
Julia E. Ralph www.mdpi.com

