Abstract
The aim of this study is to investigate the demographic and clinical characteristics of knee and ankle traumas that could not be detected in the first post-traumatic evaluation and diagnosed within 15 days after the follow-up examination and to discuss the results we obtained with current data. Patients admitted to the emergency department trauma department between January 1, 2017, and December 31, 2018, were retrospectively analyzed. Applications due to traffic accidents and all traumas except knee and ankle trauma were excluded from the study. Medical records were used to reveal the demographic characteristics of the cases, clinical findings, mechanisms of injury, additional injuries, and interventions in the emergency room. The mean age of 2,039 patients included in the study due to knee, foot, and ankle trauma was 35.69±12.01, and the median value was 36 (age range 11-71). The patients were divided into 2 groups knee trauma and ankle trauma and statistical evaluations were made. Of the patients evaluated for knee trauma (n=1,157), 463 (40%) were female and 694 (60%) were male. Of the patients evaluated for ankle trauma (n=882), 397 (45%) were female and 485 (55%) were male. It is evident that knee, foot, and ankle traumas after simple falls and sports injuries are frequently encountered by emergency physicians. It is known that post-traumatic ligament injury, bone contusion, intraarticular fluid/hematoma formation, and fractures that cannot be detected by radiographs can be overlooked in emergency departments where patient density is high.
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