Objectives: To measure the late morbidity of nailed isolated tibial fractures, using both a generic health score and disease-specific scores. To determine the correlation between the two types of outcome measure.
Design: Retrospective study, using a combination of case notes and radiographic review plus current clinical assessment.
Setting: Fracture Outcomes Research Unit in a U.K. teaching hospital.
Patients: Eighty-three patients with isolated fractures of the tibial diaphysis. Follow-up time was a minimum of three years from injury (mean fifty-seven months).
Intervention: All patients were treated primarily by closed, reamed intramedullary nailing.
Outcome measurements: Iowa Knee and Ankle Scores, visual analogue pain scores for fracture site and knee and ankle joints, and the Short Form 36 health status questionnaire.
Results: Sixty-four (77.1%) fractures united after the first procedure. Twenty-nine (34.9%) patients had pain around the knee at rest, fifty-nine (71.1%) had difficulty in kneeling, and thirteen (15.7%) were still experiencing some pain at their fracture site; 69% of patients had excellent results based on the Iowa scores as well as the SF-36 scores. Pain at the knee correlated with low Physical Component Summary and Mental Component Summary scores, and fracture site pain correlated with only low Physical Component Summary score. There was a significant correlation between the disease-specific scores and the SF-36 scores, and only patients with an excellent Iowa grade had "normal" SF-36 scores.
Conclusion: After tibial nailing, mild deficits registered by Iowa scores are associated with a significant disability and unhappiness as registered by the SF-36. According to the patient-oriented outcomes tool, 31% of late results are "unsatisfactory."