• OBJECTIVES
    • To present a review of the clinical characteristics, preoperative and surgical management, and outcomes of patients with intra-articular calcaneal fractures who had open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) and to offer some comments on and research ideas for the preoperative management of patients with these fractures.
  • PATIENTS AND METHODS
    • We studied consecutive patients who had ORIF performed by a single surgeon for closed, intra-articular calcaneal fractures at our level-1 trauma center between 5/29/2012 and 3/20/2018. All inpatients were treated with a preoperative soft tissue management protocol, whereas outpatients were not. Data were obtained about demographic and clinical characteristics, times from injury to surgery, quality of fracture reductions, and complication rates.
  • RESULTS
    • Mean follow-up for the 72 patients with 77 calcaneal fractures was 8.5 (range: 1-43) months, and 21 (27.3%) fractures received inpatient preoperative care with a soft tissue management protocol, while 56 (72.7%) received outpatient preoperative management. More of the fractures treated preoperatively as inpatients versus outpatients were classified as Sanders type III (66.7% vs. 32.1%) and type IV (8.9% vs. 4.8%) fractures and were associated with polytrauma (38.1% vs. 7.1%) and diabetes mellitus (9.5% vs. 5.4%), respectively. For all patients, the mean time from injury to surgery was 12.2 (range: 2.7-19.4) days, and the time was 6.3 days for inpatients and 14.4 days for outpatients, but the quality of fracture reductions and complication rates did not differ between these two groups.
  • CONCLUSIONS
    • Patients with intra-articular calcaneal fractures treated as inpatients and receiving a preoperative soft tissue management protocol had outcomes after ORIF that were not inferior to those experienced by patients treated preoperatively as outpatients, despite a greater proportion of the inpatients having severe fractures, polytrauma, and diabetes mellitus. Dedicated preoperative soft tissue management protocols may be beneficial for patients with calcaneal fractures and warrant further study.