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This is a medial tibial plateau fracture with a split or depressed component. It is usually the result of a high energy injury and involves a varus force with axial loading at the knee. Represent 10% of all tibial plateau fractures. There is high risk of damage to the popliteal artery and peroneal nerve and therefore carry a worse prognosis.
A tib-fib fracture is a fracture of both the tibia and fibula of the same leg in the same incident. In 78% of cases, a fracture of the fibula is associated with a tibial fracture. [6] Since the fibula is smaller and weaker than the tibia, a force strong enough to fracture the tibia often fractures the fibula as well. Types include:
The bony congruity of the medial knee consists of the opposing surfaces of the medial femoral condyle and the medial tibial plateau. On the medial femoral condyle there are three bony landmarks that are important: the medial epicondyle, adductor tubercle, and gastrocnemius tubercle. The medial epicondyle is the most distal and anterior prominence.
Personal tools. Donate; Create account; ... Medial condyle of tibia. 3 languages. ... The medial condyle is the medial (or inner) ...
The Injury Severity Score (ISS) is an established medical score to assess trauma severity. [1] [2] It correlates with mortality, morbidity and hospitalization time after trauma.
This is particularly relevant for open fractures. For open comminuted fractures of the tibial plateau the use of circular frames (like TSF) has markedly reduced infection rates. [2] The time taken for bones to heal (time to union) varies depending on a number of factors. Open fractures take longer to
Avulsion fracture of the anterior colliculus involving the superficial deltoid ligament: B Intermediate fracture C Fracture at the level of the plafond (Lauge-Hansen external rotation-abduction type) D Plafond fracture (Lauge-Hansen supination-adduction type)
The menisci are C-shaped wedges of fibrocartilage located between the tibial plateau and femoral condyles. The menisci contain 70% type I collagen. [11] The larger semilunar medial meniscus is attached more firmly than the loosely fixed, more circular lateral meniscus. The anterior and posterior horns of both menisci are secured to the tibial ...