Mechanisms of fracture in ankle and foot injuries to drivers in motor vehicle crashes.

Author(s)
Lestina, D.C. Kuhlmann, T.P. Keats, T.E. & Alley, R.M.
Year
Abstract

The exact mechanisms of ankle and foot fracture in motor vehicle crashes have been little studied because detailed medical records of injured occupants have been lacking. A study of 23 frontal impacts for which detailed information, including x-rays, is available was conducted to identify common mechanisms of fracture and examine the role of footwell intrusion in ankle and foot injury. The medical files made possible the association of fracture mechanisms with injury locations within and near the ankle and the positive identification of 4 common fracture mechanisms: inversion or eversion, direct vertical force, dorsiflexion, and direct side force. Inversion or eversion was identified as a fracture mechanism in 15 of the 23 injured ankles or feet (65 percent) and in 12 of 13 malleolar injuries (92 percent). This stands in contrast to other recent work in which dorsiflexion was postulated to be a prominent injury mechanism. Concurrent vehicle investigations made it clear that footwell intrusion plays a large role in injuries induced by inversion or eversion. The importance of intrusion as a contributing cause of ankle and foot injuries is currently unrecognized in United States' vehicle safety standards.

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Publication

Library number
C 1066 (In: C 1061 [electronic version only]) /84 / IRRD 856898
Source

In: Proceedings of the thirty-sixth Stapp Car Crash Conference, Seattle, Washington, November 2-4, 1992, p. 59-68, 23 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.