Achieving the best possible articular congruity following a tibial plateau (TP) fracture is associated with better long-term functional outcomes; TP has an essential role in the movements of the knee joint and is well established that a not optimal reduction leads to articular instability and early osteoarthritis. In recent times, 3D reconstruction from CT scan has greatly contributed to improve the surgical treatment of these fractures since an accurate preoperative plan gives the possibility to decide the best interventional strategy before the surgical incision. Reduction of the posterior part of tibial plateau is not easily achievable with standard surgical access. Several posterolateral approaches, proposed by authors such as Frosch and Lobenhoffer, have been described over the years; these approaches can be divided into 2 groups: with or without osteotomy of the fibula. Main disadvantages of these techniques are the large skin incision, the difficulty of exposing the lateral face of the tibia, the high frequency of damages of the posterolateral TP corner, and in some cases the necessity of performing fibular head osteotomy. The surgical approach presented in this paper is a simple innovation of the well-known Frosch approach: skin incision is about 12 centimeters in length and runs in a “S” shape with the center positioned over the head of the fibula. It starts 2 centimeters laterally to the tibial crest 6 centimeters below the tibial tuberosity and is directed proximally, curving posteriorly at the level of fibular head and returning straight in the most proximal part; it terminates 4 centimeters posteriorly the lateral femoral condyle. This innovative approach allows the trauma surgeon to achieve an optimal exposure and control of posterior tibial plateau fractures, with the great advantage of being able to treat the lateral tibial plateau with the same surgical incision.

A modified Frosch approach for posterior tibial plateau fractures: technical note and case series

Mancini N.;
2023-01-01

Abstract

Achieving the best possible articular congruity following a tibial plateau (TP) fracture is associated with better long-term functional outcomes; TP has an essential role in the movements of the knee joint and is well established that a not optimal reduction leads to articular instability and early osteoarthritis. In recent times, 3D reconstruction from CT scan has greatly contributed to improve the surgical treatment of these fractures since an accurate preoperative plan gives the possibility to decide the best interventional strategy before the surgical incision. Reduction of the posterior part of tibial plateau is not easily achievable with standard surgical access. Several posterolateral approaches, proposed by authors such as Frosch and Lobenhoffer, have been described over the years; these approaches can be divided into 2 groups: with or without osteotomy of the fibula. Main disadvantages of these techniques are the large skin incision, the difficulty of exposing the lateral face of the tibia, the high frequency of damages of the posterolateral TP corner, and in some cases the necessity of performing fibular head osteotomy. The surgical approach presented in this paper is a simple innovation of the well-known Frosch approach: skin incision is about 12 centimeters in length and runs in a “S” shape with the center positioned over the head of the fibula. It starts 2 centimeters laterally to the tibial crest 6 centimeters below the tibial tuberosity and is directed proximally, curving posteriorly at the level of fibular head and returning straight in the most proximal part; it terminates 4 centimeters posteriorly the lateral femoral condyle. This innovative approach allows the trauma surgeon to achieve an optimal exposure and control of posterior tibial plateau fractures, with the great advantage of being able to treat the lateral tibial plateau with the same surgical incision.
2023
2021
Frosch; Posterior tibial plateau; surgical approach
Mancini, N.; Salvato, D.; Delmastro, E.; Belluati, A.; Salini, V.; Placella, G.
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
1-s2.0-S0020138321002485-main.pdf

non disponibili

Tipologia: Versione Editoriale (PDF)
Licenza: Copyright dell'editore
Dimensione 2.73 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
2.73 MB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/2149038
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 4
  • Scopus 5
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 6
social impact