506.546.6286
Imaginez comment facile et plaisante serait la vie sans vivre avec toute cette douleur
Choisissez l'option qui vous convient le mieux ...

SI VOUS ÊTES EN DOULEUR ET QUE VOUS VOULEZ VOUS SENTIR MIEUX, NOUS SOMMES LÀ POUR VOUS! NOUS TRAVAILLONS AVEC DES GENS QUI DÉSIRENT TROUVER UNE SOLUTION À LEUR PROBLÈME ET QUI SONT ENGAGÉS À AMÉLIORER LEUR SANTÉ ET LEUR QUALITÉ DE LA VIE.

SI VOUS VOULEZ PRENDRE CONTRÔLE DE VOTRE DOULEUR ET RETROUVER LE PLAISIR DE VIVRE, CLIQUEZ SUR UNE DES OPTIONS GRATUITES CI-DESSUS ET COMMENÇONS LA CONVERSATION!

Ebook
Ça peut sembler fou ...mais oui, on vous offre des CONSEILS GRATUITS pour que vous puissiez traiter votre blessure et vous sentir mieux par rapport à votre travail
OUI ! Je veux mon rapport GRATUIT

Dites nous où vous avez mal pour qu'on puisse vous aider:

Ebook
Douleur au dos
Apprenez des façons faciles pour avoir un dos plus fort afin que vous puissiez travailler et avoir du plaisir sans soucis. Ebook
Ebook
Douleur au coude
Apprenez des techniques rapides pour retrouver la force à la main. Ebook
Ebook
Douleur au genou
Apprenez des conseils pour marcher ou courir plus loin et plus longtemps avec moins de douleur au genou. Ebook
Ebook
Douleur à l'épaule
Soulagez la douleur à l'épaule pour vous en servir avec confiance à nouveau. Ebook

Will OAT work for a severe ankle injury for a post-menopausal woman?

Q: After a very severe ankle injury, I found out I have a hole in the ankle bone that goes clear down to through the cartilage to the bone. The surgeon is recommending something called an OAT procedure. At age 55 (and being a post-menopausal woman), will this work for me? I don't heal as well as I used to.

A: Holes referred to as "defects" in cartilage that go clear down to the bone can be treated with the technique you mentioned: osteochondral autograft transfer or OAT. Osteochondral autograft transfer (OAT) involves removing a plug of cartilage and bone from a healthy area (usually from a non-weight bearing area of the knee) and transferring it into the osteochondral lesion (i.e., hole in the surface of the same person's joint). The word "autograft" refers to the fact that the patient donates his or her own tissue for the procedure.

In a recent study from Korea, surgeons used a second arthroscopic examination a year later to evaluate the results of this procedure used on the talus (ankle bone). It is rare that a second-look arthroscopic exam is possible so the results of this study are important. Quality of bone and cartilage graft were evaluated using the second arthroscopy instead of MRI in order to get a better look at the results.

Using an analysis of many patient variables, the researchers were able to determine the most important factors affecting the final results. They investigated the role of age, gender, body mass index (BMI), duration of symptoms, severity (depth and size) and location of lesion, and presence of bone cysts as predictive factors of outcomes. They also looked at results based on patient satisfaction, pain, function, and activity level.

Ninety-five per cent (95%) of the group reported good-to-excellent outcomes. Age was not a statistically significant factor. The most important variable in the result of the OAT procedure was actually a surgical effect. The surgeon must restore the joint surface smoothly, evenly, and anatomically accurately.

Impingement (pinching) of the surrounding soft tissues must be avoided. The graft shape and size must match the defect as closely as possible. And the graft must be covered over carefully with a patch to prevent "uncovered" areas. It seems that any gaps or uncovered spots quickly fill in with fibrous cartilage. The result is an unstable defect area.

The authors of this particular study suggest longer-term studies (beyond the one-year mark) in order to evaluate changes and look for influencing factors that might not show up in the first 12-months. They also commented that their study was fairly small in terms of number of patients (52 ankles). Therefore the study should be repeated with a larger number of subjects before accepting these results as the final word on the subject.

But it does offer some evidence that your age and potentially your postmenopausal status may not make a difference. These are good questions to ask your surgeon before having this procedure. Reparative surgery is important in this condition to avoid premature arthritic changes that can cause a chronically painful and unstable ankle.

Reference: Yong Sang Kim, MD, et al. Factors Associated with the Clinical Outcomes of the Osteochondral Autograft Transfer System in Osteochondral Lesions of the Talus. Second-Look Arthroscopic Evaluation. In The American Journal of Sports Medicine. December 2012. Vol. 40. No. 12. Pp. 2709-2719.

Share this page
Printer