2024

nature scientific reports

Longitudinal weight and plantar pressure distribution while standing after tibial or malleolar fractures in patients with or without fracture union

Elke Warmerdam, Sonja Baumgartner, Tim Pohlemann, Bergita Ganse

Werner Siemens-Endowed Chair for Innovative Implant Development (Fracture Healing), Departments and Institutes of Surgery, Saarland University, Homburg, Germany

Keywords

fracture healing, instrumented insoles, nonunion, pedobarography, postoperative monitoring, static sway

Abstract

Fracture healing is usually monitored by clinical impressions and radiographs. Objective and easy methods for assessing fracture healing without radiation would be beneficial. The aim of this study was to analyse whether weight and plantar pressure while standing can be used to monitor healing of tibial or malleolar fractures and whether these parameters can discriminate between patients with and without union. Thirteen patients were longitudinally assessed during each postoperative clinical visit, of whom two developed a nonunion. Eleven matched healthy controls were assessed once. Additionally, five patients already experiencing nonunion were assessed once at the time of their nonunion diagnosis. All participants performed a standing task for ten seconds with pressure-sensing insoles. Greatest improvements were detected throughout the first three months in patients with union. However, six months after surgery, more than half of the parameters were still significantly different from those of the controls. The weight and pressure distributions did not differ between patients with or without union six months after surgery. A standing task can be used to monitor improvements in weight and pressure distribution throughout the healing process of tibial or malleolar fractures, but lacks potential to discriminate between patients with or without fracture union.

Moticon's Summary

This study investigated whether weight and plantar pressure distribution while standing could monitor tibial or malleolar fracture healing and differentiate between patients with and without union. Researchers used OpenGo sensor insoles to longitudinally assess 13 patients with fractures and 11 healthy controls. While improvements in weight and pressure distribution could be monitored, these measures failed to reliably distinguish between union and nonunion six months post-surgery. The study suggests that this method could complement existing monitoring, offering valuable information for personalized therapy, although larger studies are needed to confirm the findings. Despite limitations, the standing task is easy to implement clinically.

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