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How long should patients be kept non-weight bearing after ankle fracture fixation? A survey of OTA and AOFAS members.

Injury 2015
BACKGROUND: Ankle fractures are common injuries treated routinely by orthopaedic surgeons. A variety of different post-operative protocols have been described with differing periods of non-weight bearing after surgery. The aim of this study was to identify how patient injury characteristics and medical comorbidities contribute to the period of non-weight bearing chosen by orthopaedic surgeons after open reduction and internal fixation of rotational ankle fractures.

METHODS: A cross sectional expert opinion survey was administered to members of the AOFAS as well as OTA to determine how long they would instruct patients to be non-weight bearing after open reduction and internal fixation of ankle fractures. Three different injury characteristics were described: supination external rotation type 4 equivalents, bimalleolar, and trimalleolar patterns. These patterns were combined with three different medical statuses: young and healthy, older and healthy, and older with significant medical comorbidity. Respondents selected how long they would keep the patient non-weight bearing after surgery for each of the potential scenarios. Finally, they were directly asked which factors they felt affected their decision about length of time to keep patients non-weight bearing.

RESULTS: Seven hundred and two surgeons (31%) responded to the survey. The average time of non-weight bearing selected varied from 4.9 (± 3.1) weeks for in young, healthy patients with SER4 equivalent injuries to 7.6 (± 6.0) weeks for older patients with medical comorbidities with trimalleolar fractures. Responses had a high degree of heterogeneity, but both injury pattern and medical status were significant predictors of non-weight bearing period (p<0.01), with medical status the stronger determinant.

CONCLUSIONS: There is significant variation among orthopaedic surgeons when selecting period of non-weight bearing after fixation of ankle fractures, with both injury pattern and medical comorbidity playing a role in decision of time to keep patient non-weight bearing. Further research further evaluating the relationship between these factors and safe periods of non-weight bearing could help identify patients that may benefit from earlier mobilization, and improve surgeon's comfort with early mobilization.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Therapeutic Level V.

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