BOFAS News & Events

This pages lists all the latest news and upcoming events.

 

To access 'Foot Print' (the BOFAS Bulletin) please click here (members only)

 

Latest News

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BOFAS Hosted Events

BOFAS Principles Course - Dubai

The aim is to give Overseas Trainee Orthopaedic Surgeons a solid grounding in the principles and the decision making in Foot & Ankle Surgery.

There is an emphasis on clinical examination of cases, small group discussions and learning surgical approaches in the cadaver lab.

This is the first course BOFAS is running in UAE and the aim is to expand the Foot and Ankle education and training in the Middle East and Gulf area.

Venue - Le Meridien, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Documents to download

BOFAS Principles Course Taunton

These courses are aimed at Higher Surgical Trainees / ST3 onwards and are designed to teach the core of Foot and Ankle surgery in an informal and interactive environment. The emphasis is on clinical examination cases, discussion groups and typical day-to-day clinic scenarios. Although not an exam preparation course, content is taught to the standard expected in the FRCS(Tr & Orth) exam; that of a day-one non-specialist orthopaedic consultant. Applications will open on 1st September 2023.

Venue - Taunton (TBC)

 

 

Documents to download


 

BOFAS Affiliated Courses

Other External Events / Courses

Togay Koç
/ Categories: Abstracts, 2013, Poster

What proportion of patients eventually require joint fusion following simple ankle fractures?

G. Williams, D. Withers, J. Ballester, D. Bailey

Introduction: The literature contains few outcome studies providing long term follow up for ankle fractures, to our knowledge no studies have defined the medium to long term probability of significant further surgery for this group of patients.

Methods: Using our institutions coding database we identified a cohort of patients (n = 2137) treated for ankle fractures over a 10 year period (Jan 2001 to Dec 2011). Primary data of interest was collected in respect to whether the fracture was managed conservatively or with open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) and further procedures each patient underwent at our institution.

Results: 73% of the identified fractures were managed non-operatively (n = 1552), 28% (n = 585) underwent ORIF. Of patients treated with ORIF, 58 (8.8%) required metalwork removal. Ankle joint fusion was the eventual outcome for 15 patients (0.7%). 10 patients required ankle joint injections (0.5%) and 2 patients underwent ankle arthroscopy following their fracture (0.1%). Significantly more of the patients requiring eventual joint fusion were from the ORIF group (p = 0.001 Pearson Chi-Squared test, n = 10 vs 5 patients, relative risk 5.3, CI 1.7-17.7). Mean time to fusion or arthroscopy was at 23months (range 1-50months) and 30months (range 9-52months) respectively.

Conclusion: It is practical to assume that more serious fracture patterns would prompt treatment with ORIF and be more likely to result in subsequent ankle arthritis and eventual fusion. Our data supports this hypothesis as the relative risk for ankle fusion was over five times higher for fracture patterns treated with ORIF. Patients can be reassured that overall the probability for significant surgical procedures other than metal work removal is low however our sample may underestimate the additional surgical morbidity and fusion rate.

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