Experience with forty-nine patients with surgically treated transchondral
fractures of the talar dome seen between 1957 and 1977 at our institution has
indicated that surgical treatment yields a good long-term result. Long-term
results in twenty-five patients with sufficiently long follow-up (average,
sixty-five months) were recorded. Ninety-two per cent of the patients had had
a history of severe ankle sprain or fracture and many had had chronic symptoms
before the definitive diagnosis was made. The surgical treatment consisted of
drilling and curettage followed by non-weight-bearing and early
range-of-motion exercises. Twenty-two patients had good or excellent results,
two had fair results, and one had a poor result. In eleven patients followed
for five to eighteen years, no deterioration in functional capacity was noted;
however, improvement in the postoperative status was noted for as long as
eighteen months.
Even when it was performed for a chronic lesion the operation gave a high
percentage of good results, and the long-term results did not differ
appreciably from the results eighteen months postoperatively. No other reports
were found concerning long-term follow-up of this lesion.