Subtalar dislocations: long-term follow-up of 39 cases
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Cited by (56)
Disorders of the Subtalar Joint, Including Subtalar Sprains and Tarsal Coalitions
2020, Baxter’s The Foot And Ankle In SportTraumatic Injury to the Subtalar Joint
2018, Foot and Ankle ClinicsUnstable Open Posterior Subtalar Dislocation Treated With a Ring External Fixator: A Case Report and Review of the Literature
2017, Journal of Foot and Ankle SurgerySubtalar Dislocations
2015, Foot and Ankle ClinicsCitation Excerpt :For painful combined arthritis of the subtalar and talonavicular joint, some authors have advocated triple fusion.22,36 Development of a complex regional pain syndrome type I is rare and may be associated with delayed reduction or incomplete analgesia.37 Direct injury to the tibial nerve may lead to complex regional pain syndrome type II (causalgia) and may require surgical revision.
Medial peritalar fracture dislocation of the talar body
2015, Trauma Case ReportsCitation Excerpt :In that way, they can be viewed as a more thorough dislocation of the talus than subtalar dislocations. Medial subtalar joint dislocations account for approximately 85% of subtalar dislocations and are usually the result of an inversional force, driving the talar head laterally and displacing the hindfoot medially [2,7,11,13]. Obstruction to closed reduction occurs in anywhere from 10% to 30% of subtalar dislocations, classically due to entrapment of the extensor digitorum brevis, extensor retinaculum or obstructing fracture fragments [1,6,8].
Biomechanical evaluation of two commonly used external fixators in the treatment of open subtalar dislocation-A finite element analysis
2014, Medical Engineering and PhysicsCitation Excerpt :Medial dislocations are caused by lateral displacement of the talus responding to an applied inversion force to the plantarflexed foot, while lateral injuries are caused by medial dislocation of the talus due to an eversion force applied to an plantarflexed foot [3]. Golner and Merchan (in 1992 and 1995), described 10–40% of subtalar dislocations as open injuries and the rest as closed types [4,5]. In both cases, injuries to ligaments were involved, leading to an unstable ankle joint.