New Website New Website We have a brand new look 01 February 2021 BOFAS are pleased to announce our new website! Read more
20Apr2026 BOFAS Diabetic Foot Principles Course 20/04/2026 Read more BOFAS Diabetic Foot Principles Course 20th April 2026, Delta by Marriott Hotel, Milton Keynes £150.00 Read more
29Apr2026 BOFAS Trauma Course 29/04/2026 Read more BOFAS Trauma Course 29th April 2026, Bristol £150 Read more
15May2026 BOFAS Allied Health Professionals Course 15/05/2026 Read more BOFAS Allied Health Professionals Course 15th May 2026, Bournemouth Read more
2Jul2026 BOFAS Basics & Advanced Arthroscopy Skills Course 02/07/2026 Read more BOFAS Basics & Advanced Arthroscopy Skills Course 2nd-3rd July 2026, Solihull Read more
1Oct2026 BOFAS Principles Course 01/10/2026 Read more BOFAS Principles Course 1st-2nd October 2026, Glasgow £325.00 Read more
6May2026 Nordic Foot & Ankle Congress 06/05/2026 - 07/05/2026 Read more Nordic Foot & Ankle Congress BOFAS Members have been invited to the Nordic Foot & Ankle Congress May 6/7 2026 in Oslo. Read more
Togay Koç / 23 June 2022 / Categories: Abstracts, 2013, Podium The role of non-operative management in the treatment of the Jones fracture: a six-year series A.C. Keenan, A.M. Wood, R.M. Boyle, F.C. Doogan, C. Court-Brown Introduction: The orthopaedic literature appears to highlight the Jones fracture of the fifth metatarsal, as being slow to heal, and having a high incidence of non-union. The authors present the largest case series currently published of 117 patients who sustained a Jones fracture, demonstrating patient outcomes with conservative treatment. Methods: A computer program was use to search the Emergency department database of the Edinburgh Royal infirmary notes data base for terms 5th metatarsal combined with a coding for referral to fracture clinic over a 6 years period from 2004-2010. The researchers went through the X-ray archive, identified and classified all 5th metatarsal fractures. Results: There were 117 patients in our series, Average time to discharge 13 weeks (4-24). 19% of patients took longer than 18 weeks for their fracture to clinically heal. At six weeks 34% were clinically healed, 59% at 12 weeks and 81% at 18 weeks. A refracture rate 6/117 5.1% was seen. A similar number of patients were managed in cast (44/ 38%) and Moonboot (50/ 43%). Those treated with a Moonboot heal significantly faster that those treated in cast (p=0.0027). Conclusion: A large proportion of Jones fractures have delayed healing, patients who are clinically asymptomatic may not have radiological healing. Print 1263 Tags: FractureTrauma5th Metatarsal