Proximal tibia fractures and combined tibial shaft-plateau injuries are increasingly common. Prolonged nonweightbearing may result in poor outcomes, particularly in elderly patients. Nail–plate combination constructs offer an attractive solution to facilitate early weight-bearing in these complex problems. We describe strategies and tips for these constructs and present the results of a small patient series treated with this technique.
In early 2020, in the editorial "A call to arms: it's time to bear weight," Trompeter [1] stated: "as we travel down the limb, we see an increased reluctance on the part of the treating surgeon to allow the patient to bear weight postoperatively." While early weight-bearing in postoperative hip fracture constructs is well established, fractures distal to the hip are less likely to be allowed full mobilization, even in the frail elderly. A steadily increasing stream of literature, from the ankle up, shows potential advantages in immediate weight-bearing in the lower extremity with few, if any, ill effects. [2][3][4][5] While the literature itself is not always Level 1 or methodologically robust, surgeons must be aware of this option as they deal with an onslaught of fragility fractures in the lower extremity. [6] In the last 10 years of Orthopaedic Trauma Association material, early weight-bearing studies have been published, but the topic has never had its own focus in a supplement. We believe it is important for the Orthopaedic Trauma Association to give this subject focused traction, so that community and other surgeons feel comfortable initiating these changes after learning from the experiences of master surgeons who are early adopters and pioneers of new constructs and techniques in this arena. Early mobility and weight-bearing is extremely important for decreasing medical complications, morbidity, and mortality in our patients, particularly in the elderly.
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