Results of arthroscopic microfracture treatment for traumatic and non-traumatic osteochondral lesions of the talus: a retrospective cohort study
Muhammed Taha Demir, Yigit Kultur, Hilmi Karadeniz

TL;DR
This study found that arthroscopic microfracture surgery works equally well for traumatic and non-traumatic ankle cartilage injuries, but higher BMI increases risk of non-traumatic injuries.
Contribution
Shows microfracture outcomes are similar for traumatic vs non-traumatic talus lesions, while identifying BMI as a risk factor for non-traumatic cases.
Findings
Both traumatic and non-traumatic OLT patients showed significant postoperative improvement in AOFAS and VAS scores.
94.3% of patients returned to baseline activity levels after surgery with no group difference.
Non-traumatic OLT group had significantly higher BMI compared to traumatic group.
Abstract
This study is designed to assess the extent to which the outcomes of arthroscopic microfracture surgery for talus osteochondral lesions (OLTs)—whether of traumatic or atraumatic origin—are influenced by these underlying etiologic factors. Toward this end, it aims to optimise patient selection and treatment plans, thereby enabling the prediction of surgical prognosis. This retrospective study included 70 ankles from 70 patients with OLTs, who were treated with microfracture procedures using anterior ankle arthroscopy by orthopaedic surgeons at two different medical centres. Of these cases, 38 were of a traumatic origin (Group 1) and 32 were of a non-traumatic origin (Group 2). The inclusion criteria were adult patients with unilateral, detached and/or displaced lesions located in the medial central region of the talus. Preoperative and final follow-up American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFoot and Ankle Surgery · Tendon Structure and Treatment · Lower Extremity Biomechanics and Pathologies
