Researchers propose reproducible method to quantify syndesmosis displacement based on spatial WBCT data

The syndesmosis is located just above the ankle where the tibia and fibula meet, providing stability to the ankle joint while allowing for its motion. A sprain, twist, rotational injury, or break to the ankle can stretch and tear the ligaments that support the syndesmosis. Syndesmotic injuries occur in up to 18 percent of all ankle sprains and 23 percent of all ankle fractures. However, the limitations of 2D imaging make a diagnosis and operative treatment of syndesmotic ankle injuries challenging.

Despite high accuracy and sensitivity, CT scans may underestimate the extent of syndesmotic lesions because of non-weight bearing conditions.

Weight bearing cone beam CT (WBCT) is an alternative imaging technique with numerous advantages, including relatively low radiation dose.

Researchers in the United States and Belgium aimed to develop a reproducible method using WBCT to quantify displacement, translation and rotation of the fibula caused by subtle syndesmostic injuries. Current methods use a single slice of a CT volume. The researchers proposed segmenting a volume out of bilateral ankle CTs superimposing the healthy ankle on the contralateral ankle to compare the deviation of the fibula to quantify the extend of the lesion.

The researchers conducted a study on eighteen patients with a unilateral syndesmotic lesion. The results were described in a study titled,  “Templating of Syndesmotic Ankle Lesions by Use of 3D Analysis in Weight-bearing and Nonweightbearing CT”.

For those patients with a high ankle sprain (n = 12), bilateral imaging was performed with weight-bearing cone-beam computed tomography (CT), while non-weight-bearing CT was used for those with fracture-associated syndesmotic lesions (n = 6). To quantify the syndesmotic lesions, changes between the most lateral aspect of the lateral malleolus and the anterior and posterior tubercle in the healthy, stationary fibula were compared to those of the affected patients, using a control group of seven studies.

Deviations were calculated using defined anatomical landmarks on computer assisted design (CAD) software, rather than via manual methods.

The study found there were significant differences in the tibiofibular configuration between injured and healthy ankles.

The study concluded that

  • The method was accurate in assessing subtle syndesmotic injuries.
  • In the case of fracture associated with syndesmotic injury, it offered a precise description of the displacement related to the integrity of the distal tibiofibular syndesmosis.
  • In a case with pronounced fibular comminution, the amount of shortening could be preoperatively calculated, facilitating reconstruction of the fibula.

Click here to read about a previous study in which cadavers were scanned via WBCT imaging in an effort to shed light on the rotational dynamics in syndesmosis.

Read more at curvebeam.com

Follow us on social media for the latest updates in B2B!

Image

Latest

medicine
The Art of Recovery: Where Music and Medicine Meet in Patient Care
May 14, 2026

Healthcare today can feel overwhelming—not just for patients, but for the teams caring for them. After a major illness or injury, recovery isn’t handled by one doctor alone; it often involves a whole network of specialists, from physical therapists to nurses to social workers, all trying to help someone regain their independence and quality…

Read More
infant health
From Monitoring to Knowing: How Owlet Is Redefining Infant Health at Retail
May 14, 2026

Baby monitors have long promised parents the ability to see and hear their child from another room. But as connected health devices become more normalized in everyday life, from smartwatches to sleep trackers, parents are beginning to expect more than visibility. They want insight. For Owlet, that shift matters because its wearable monitors track…

Read More
SPD
Unlocking CensisAI²: The Metrics That Matter for Smarter SPD Decisions
May 13, 2026

Sterile processing departments are swimming in data, from workflow automation and supply data to patient outcome and quality metrics. But the real challenge is not collecting more information; it is knowing which metrics actually improve SPD performance, technician education, OR readiness and patient safety. For Censis, a leader in surgical asset management, the focus…

Read More
User-generated content
The New Rules of Discoverability: How User-Generated Content Is Reshaping Search, Trust, and Brand Visibility
May 12, 2026

User-generated content (UGC) is moving from marketing side dish to main course as large language models change how people discover brands, products, creators, and ideas. Customer reviews, forum posts, videos, and community conversations increasingly carry more influence than polished brand copy because they feel more specific, lived-in, and trustworthy. As AI systems learn from…

Read More