TY - JOUR
PY - 2016//
TI - Ankle fracture patterns in drivers are associated with femoral fracture, higher BMI and advanced age
JO - Traffic injury prevention
A1 - Wynkoop, Aaron
A1 - Ndubaku, Osy
A1 - Fras, Andrew
A1 - Walter, Norman
A1 - Eekhoff, Jeremy
A1 - Atkinson, Theresa
SP - 530
EP - 534
VL - 17
IS - 5
N2 - OBJECTIVE: Despite advances in vehicle safety systems, motor vehicle crashes continue to cause ankle fractures. This study attempts to provide insight into the mechanisms of injury and to identify the at-risk population groups.
METHODS: A study was made of ankle fractures patients treated at an urban Level 1 trauma center following motor vehicle crashes, with a concurrent analysis of a nationally representative crash data set. The national data set focused on ankle fractures in drivers involved in frontal crashes. Statistical analysis was applied to the national data set to identify factors associated with fracture risk.
RESULTS: Malleolar fractures occurred most frequently in the driver's right foot due to pedal interaction. The majority of complex/open fractures occurred in the left foot due to interaction with the vehicle floor. These fractures occurred in association with a femoral fracture, but their broad injury pattern suggests a range of fracture causation mechanisms. The statistical analysis indicated that the risk of fracture increased with increasing driver BMI and age.
CONCLUSIONS: Efforts to reduce the risk of driver ankle injury should focus on right foot and pedal interaction. The range of injury patterns identified here suggest that efforts to minimize driver ankle fracture risk will likely need to consider injury tolerances for flexion, pronation/supination, and axial loading in order to capture the full range of injury mechanisms. In the clinical environment, physicians examining drivers after a frontal crash should consider those who are older, obese or who have severe femoral injury without concurrent head injury, as highly suspicious for an ankle injury.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1538-9588 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15389588.2015.1120296 ID - ref1 ER -