# Radiological characteristics and injury mechanism of Logsplitter injury: a descriptive and retrospective study

**Authors:** Jing-Qi Liang, Yan Zhang, Yang Yue, Hui Feng, Pei-Long Liu, Xiao-Jun Liang, Hong-Mou Zhao

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12891-024-07688-4 · BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders · 2024-07-26

## TL;DR

This study describes the radiological features and injury mechanisms of Logsplitter injuries, a type of high-energy ankle fracture.

## Contribution

The study provides a detailed classification of injury types and their mechanisms using radiological data.

## Key findings

- 98.4% of Logsplitter injuries were open fractures.
- Pronation-abduction was the most common injury mechanism (87.1%).
- Syndesmosis injuries were most commonly Volkmann fractures (43.5%).

## Abstract

Logsplitter Injury is a type of high-energy ankle fracture dislocation. The mechanism of injury has not been described in detail. A detailed understanding of the radiological features and pathological changes can further guide treatment.

Between April 2009 and December 2018, a retrospective analysis was conducted on 62 patients with Logsplitter injury. The study analysed the characteristics of fibular injury, tibial injury, syndesmosis injury, medial injury and lateral ligament injury on preoperative X-ray and CT scans. The incidence of the different injury types was summarised. The correlation between Logsplitter injuries and the mechanisms causing them were analysed using the Lauge-Hansen classification of ankle fractures.

The study provides data on the types of fractures observed. Of the total fractures, 98.4% were open fractures. The fibula injuries were classified as no fracture (1.6%), transverse or short oblique fractures (61.3%), butterfly fragments (25.8%), and comminuted fractures (11.3%). The tibial injuries included compression of lateral articular surfaces (38.7%) and posterior compressions (6.5%). Medial injuries, including medial malleolar fractures, accounted for 87.1%, and deltoid ligament rupture accounted for 12.9%. The study found that injuries to the syndesmosis consisted of simple ligament ruptures (11.3%), Tillaux fractures (8.1%), Volkmann fractures (43.5%), and Tillaux and Volkmann fractures (37.1%). In 12.9% of cases, there was a complete rupture of the lateral collateral ligament. Based on the Lauge-Hansen classification, 87.1% of injuries were pronation-abduction injuries, while 8.1% were pronation and external rotation injuries, and 1.6% were supination external rotation injuries. Furthermore, 3.2% of cases could not be classified.

The pathoanatomic characteristics of Logsplitter injury are diverse, with some cases accompanied by collateral ligament injury. It is important to note that these evaluations are objective and based on current results. The most common injury mechanism is vertical violence combined with abduction, although in some cases, it may be a vertical combined external-rotation injury.

(4) case series.

This study has been approved by the ethical research committee of the Honghui Hospital of Xi’an Jiaotong University, under the code: 202,003,002.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** supination external rotation injuries (MESH:D020425), Medial injuries (MESH:D020423), deltoid ligament rupture (MESH:D012421), pronation-abduction injuries (MESH:C566757), fracture (MESH:D050723), Volkmann fractures (MESH:D054061), fibula injuries (MESH:D000092504), tibial injuries (MESH:D000070600), fibular injury (MESH:D020427), oblique fractures (MESH:C537736), ankle fracture dislocation (MESH:D064386), Logsplitter Injury (MESH:D014947), Tillaux and Volkmann fractures (MESH:D013978), vertical violence (MESH:D009759), pronation and external rotation injuries (MESH:D000070636), collateral ligament injury (MESH:D000070598)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11282731