After the tibial plateau fracture heals, which foot goes down the stairs first?

Updated on healthy 2024-06-11
6 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Tibial plateau fracture of the right foot is generally caused by high-energy injuries caused by car accidents, heavy injuries, and sometimes when patients ride motorcycles, especially when the knee lands first, resulting in tibial plateau fractures.

    Tibial plateau fractures can be divided into six types, generally speaking, patients with type 1 and type 2 can be conservative**, cast or brace fixed for 4 to 6 weeks, and then enhanced functional exercises. The patient is type 3 to 6, this is a comminuted fracture, generally need surgery**, generally easy to cause bone defects, to take iliac bone grafting or allogeneic bone grafting, sometimes accompanied by cruciate ligament injury, meniscus injury, combined with knee arthroscopy for meniscus repair, and cruciate ligament reconstruction surgery.

    Navigation. Yuan Feng, Deputy Chief Physician.

    Department of Sports Medicine, East Branch (Lingang), Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital.

    Tibial plateau fracture.

    Release date: 2018-07-19Read 9706 Tibial plateau fracture.

    The fracture of tibial plateau is one of the most common fractures in knee trauma. The impact of the knee joint with valgus force or the compression force caused by the fall can lead to tibial condyle fractures. Since tibial plateau fractures are typical intra-articular fractures, their management and prognosis will have a great impact on knee function.

    At the same time, tibial plateau fractures are often accompanied by injuries to the articular cartilage, knee ligaments, or meniscus, and missed diagnosis and improper treatment may lead to knee deformities, alignment, or stability problems, resulting in joint dysfunction. Therefore, the diagnosis and management of tibial plateau fractures is an important topic in knee trauma surgery.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Now that you've been healed, it's up to you! Whoever wants to go down first can go down first. The fracture has healed, it will not have any effect, and it will be completely back to normal life!

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Hello, when you are just beginning, it should be the unaffected limb first, and then the affected limb follows. It's safer that way.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Tibial plateau fracture is an intra-articular fracture, the incidence of traumatic arthritis is very high, joint function can be restored through exercise, as for whether it can return to normal or close to normal level, it depends on whether you can work hard. It is recommended that you follow the doctor's instructions for gradual exercise, go to the hospital for regular check-ups, and the recovery time is generally more than three months.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    You can recover, with the help of crutches exercise step by step, don't worry, generally more than half a year.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Walk a moderate amount every day, and you will slowly recover.

Related questions
15 answers2024-06-11

If there is no displacement, you can play a plaster clip that exceeds the ankle and the knee, and if it is the middle and lower 1 3, you must be prepared for long-term combat! Because that part of the blood circulation is the worst, and it is also the slowest place to grow bones! >>>More

6 answers2024-06-11

Hello. Functional exercises for bone injuries.

On the basis of good reduction and immobilization, the sooner the functional exercise is better. It can promote blood circulation, reduce muscle atrophy, eliminate soft tissue swelling, prevent osteoporosis, and accelerate fracture healing. >>>More

7 answers2024-06-11

1. I am a professional orthopedic surgeon, and you did not make the problem clear. What does tibial plateau surgery have to do with the ankle joint? One is in the knee (the tibial plateau is in the knee), but you're asking about the ankle. >>>More

9 answers2024-06-11

The middle tibial fracture is still relatively easy to heal, the situation you described is like a bone crack, the callus should not be punctate, considering that it is an artifact of the film taken after the plaster, you are only about 4 weeks at present, and the lower limb fracture generally takes 6-8 weeks to remove the plaster, because the local swelling is eliminated, and the fixation is relatively firm, so your pain will be much better, and you will naturally not be very painful after more than 4 weeks of recovery, but this is not a sign of fracture healing. Follow your doctor's instructions for regular check-ups, and don't go down to the ground now, remember! You're still very happy with your current situation.

22 answers2024-06-11

It can be conservative**, with external fixation in plaster for 8 weeks. After 8 weeks, the cast is removed and the x-ray is taken to see if there is a callus growth or a blurred fracture line, and you can start functional exercises.