Abstract

Total ankle arthroplasty (TAA) has become one of the standard surgical treatments for patients with end-stage ankle osteoarthritis (OA). In recent years, TAA with total talar prosthesis (combined TAA) has been used for ankle OA patients with talar osteonecrosis, with severe talar collapse, or with subtalar joint OA. The purpose of this study was to investigate the functional and clinical outcomes of combined TAA, compared with conventional TAA. Forty-six ankles (44 patients, 32 women/12 men) that underwent conventional TAA with mean follow-up of 42 months, and 26 ankles (25 patients, 18 women/7 men) that underwent combined TAA with mean follow-up of 46 months were included. Clinical outcomes, which included ankle range of motion (ROM), the Japanese Society for Surgery of the Foot (JSSF) ankle-hindfoot scale, the Self-Administered Foot Evaluation Questionnaire (SAFE-Q), and complications were compared between the groups. The preoperative ROM was significantly worse in combined TAA for both dorsiflexion and plantarflexion; however, in the final ROM, there was no significant difference between the groups. There was no significant difference in JSSF scale and SAFE-Q between the groups. Revision rate was 10.9% in conventional TAA and 0% in combined TAA. In this small series, at an average of 3.5 years, we found no significant difference in clinical results between conventional TAA and combined TAA; however, the revision rate was higher in conventional TAA. Level III, retrospective cohort study.

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