Fracture, Metatarsal



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Fracture, Metatarsal
Andrew Hunt
Basics
The anatomy of the foot is divided into the hind-foot, the mid-foot, and the forefoot:
  • The hind-foot includes the calcaneus and talus.
  • The mid-foot includes the navicular, cuboid, and cuneiform bones.
  • The forefoot includes the metatarsals and phalanges:
    • The forefoot functions to transmit ground reaction forces to the mid-foot with weight-bearing activities.
    • Fractures in the forefoot, specifically to the metatarsals, can alter the normal distribution of weight and lead to secondary metatarsalgia (pain) as well as transfer lesions such as plantar callouses and stress lesions.
Description
  • A metatarsal fracture can be described as being extra-articular, partial intra-articular, or articular, depending on where on the metatarsal the fracture occurs. Extra-articular fractures may be transverse (straight across the long axis), oblique, or spiral. An articular or partial intra-articular may be a simple isolated fracture extending into the joint, comminuted, or an avulsion fracture.
  • A stress injury with normal radiographs but a positive exam (pain to palpation) may be categorized as macrotrabecular (visible fracture lines on MRI) or stress reaction (T2 signal change on MRI without visible fracture lines).
Epidemiology
  • Metatarsal fractures are likely more common in athletes involved in weight-bearing exercise such as dancers, runners, or contact sport athletes.
  • Any direct trauma, however, can cause fracture, and lower-risk athletes such as swimmers or bikers still may present with this injury.
Incidence
Overall incidence of metatarsal fractures is unclear, as a wide variety of physicians treat this injury:
  • This includes internists, pediatricians, family practice physicians, emergency physicians, and orthopedic surgeons.
Risk Factors
  • Same as for bone fractures in general
  • Those with osteopenia or osteoporosis have a greater risk.
  • Any activity that increases the likelihood of direct trauma to the foot increases the risk of metatarsal injury.
  • Excessively rapid progressions of training volume and/or stress on the foot can also increase the risk of metatarsal stress injury.
General Prevention
  • Gradual increases in workload allow a bone to adapt to mechanical stress and become stronger.
  • Bone is a dynamic organ that is subject to anabolic forces tending to build it up, as well as to catabolic forces tending to break it down.
  • This balance allows a bone to remodel and adapt to stress, but may also cause progressive weakening if catabolic forces outweigh the anabolic ones, such as with too-rapid progression of training load.
Etiology
  • When the cortical bone's mechanical strength is exceeded acutely by direct trauma, such as a heavy object falling on the foot, it will fracture.
    • When this acute stress is a shear force secondary to twisting on a plantar flexed foot, the fracture pattern may be a spiral in shape.
  • A fracture may also occur when the bone-tendon interface is acutely stressed past its mechanical failure point.
    • A typical example of this is at the base of the 5th metatarsal where the peroneus brevis muscle inserts and acts to evert the foot.
  • An additional mechanism for fracture occurs when repetitive subthreshold forces are incompletely healed and the additive damage eventually causes an overt fracture.
    • Prior to an overt fracture, however, such stress may cause macrotrabecular fracturing not evident on plain radiographs but seen on MRI.
Commonly Associated Conditions
  • The same forces that cause fracturing of the metatar-sals may also injure adjacent structures such as the mid-foot joint (between the row of cuneiform bones articulating with the 1st through 4th metatarsals and the cuboid articulating with the 4th and 5th metatarsal). At the other end, the metatarsophalan-geal joints (MTP joint) may be involved when a fracture extends into the joint or when the joint capsule or ligamentous structures are disrupted.
  • Other injuries to consider:
    • Mid-tarsal joint injury (calcaneo-cuboid or talo-navicular): Can include lateral process of talus or anterior process of calcaneus
    • Navicular or cuboid contusion/fracture
    • Metatarso-cuneiform/cuboid injury (MTC): Lisfranc joint injury may include ligamentous disruption and/or fracture of surrounding bone.
    • Metatarso-phalangeal joint (MTP) injury: Can include capsular or ligamentous sprain (turf toe) or fracture of adjacent bone
    • Phalangeal fracture
    • Sesamoid contusion or fracture
  • Predisposing conditions:
    • Hallux valgus/hallux rigidus: Altered mechanics at the 1st MTP joint leads body weight shifting laterally over the lesser caliber 2nd metatarsal
    • Osteopenia/osteoporosis: Decreased mechanical strength of the bone increases susceptibility to stress fracture and acute fracture
Diagnosis
  • Diagnosis of overt metatarsal fracture is by radiograph.
  • Standard views include the anteroposterior (AP), lateral, and oblique views.
  • Addition of weight-bearing views may help identify subtle lesions as well as Lisfranc injuries if the patient tolerates them.
  • Diagnosis of radiographically negative stress injury is via a technetium-99 bone scan or by MRI.
    • Advantages of MRI over bone scan include differentiation of stress reaction without fracture lines vs macrotrabecular fracture.
Pre Hospital
  • Prehospital/on-field care includes minimizing weight bearing on the affected extremity as well as icing to reduce swelling and inflammation.
  • If there is no evidence for open fracture or vascular compromise, plain radiographs may be obtained at the patient's convenience.
  • If there is visible bone penetrating the skin or the extremity is cool indicative of vascular compromise, immediate transport to the emergency room is advisable.
History
  • With acute injury, the patient will usually be able to point to a direct trauma to the foot or a twisting injury causing pain.
  • More subtle stress injuries will typically have a history of recent increases in training volume or impact load and possibly a prior history of other stress fractures, disordered eating, or menstrual irregularities.
Physical Exam
  • Point-tenderness directly over the metatarsal is the typical finding on exam.
  • The foot will usually show some swelling in comparison to the unaffected foot and possibly some bruising as well.
  • Gross displacement is not common. Open fractures will present with bone penetrating through the skin.
Diagnostic Tests & Interpretation
  • Focal tenderness and/or swelling over the metatarsals after an injury is a clear indication for plain radiographs to rule out a fracture.
  • Chronic symptoms of foot pain with weight bearing and negative radiographs warrants further imaging such as bone scan or MRI.
  • An urgent need for a clear diagnosis after an acute injury and negative radiographs also suggests the need for further imaging.
Imaging
  • Plain radiographs will show cortical disruption if a significant fracture has occurred.
  • The findings may be subtle with mild injury.
  • A stress fracture may show subtle sclerotic borders/periosteal elevation or be entirely normal.
  • Plain films only become positive once healing has progressed enough to produce visible bony callus. In the interim, an MRI should show changes on T2 images and a bone scan should be positive for focal hot spot over the painful area.
  • A CT scan may be indicated for an intra-articular fracture to delineate any articular step-off.
Differential Diagnosis
  • MTP joint synovitis: Inflammation of the joint rather than stress reaction in the bone itself. Bone scan will show distal uptake around MTP joint. MRI is diagnostic. Claw toe may also cause synovitis with plantar displacement of metatarsal head or a metatarsal stress reaction.
  • MTP capsular strain and/or chip fracture of 1st metatarsal head (turf toe)
  • Lisfranc sprain/fracture: Injury to the 2nd MTC articulation. Any pain at the proximal 2nd metatarsal in association with a twisting injury in plantar flexion should raise concern for this injury.
  • Mid-foot sprain: Injury to MTC ligamentous structures
  • Forefoot mass (ganglion or tumor)
  • Metatarsalgia
  • Morton's neuroma (interdigital neuroma)
  • Freiberg's infarction: Osteonecrosis of 2nd metatarsal head. More common in adolescent athletes with unilateral (usually) pain in 2nd metatarsal head.

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Ongoing Care
  • Upon discharge from the ED or after initial diagnosis, a patient with a metatarsal fracture should be seen in the office for follow-up radiographs in 1 wk to document correct bony alignment and adequacy of the treatment mode. Assuming radiographs show stability, follow-up films can be obtained at 6 wks, when full healing should be expected.
  • The least-limiting form of immobilization should be considered. With the exception of a Jones fracture, most metatarsal fractures tolerate weight bearing with use of a cast shoe/wooden-soled shoe fairly quickly, if not at the time of diagnosis. If fracture brace/CAM boot use is required initially, transition to a stiff-soled or cast shoe should be considered when tolerated. A steel shank insert into a gym shoe may also be used.
  • Restriction from full weight-bearing stress without protection should continue for at least 4 wks for a stress fracture and for 4–6 wks for a nondisplaced metatarsal fracture. Pain to palpation and forefoot swelling should subside as the fracture heals. Evidence for radiographic healing, resolution of edema, and pain-free direct palpation are needed for return to sports.
  • Jones fracture:
    • Once diagnosis is made, an NWB fracture brace/cast is used for 6 wks to allow for healing to occur. Repeat radiographs are done at this point to assess progress, but up to 12 wks may be needed. Nonunions at 12 wks may require ORIF. The decision to pursue ORIF for a Jones fracture in a competitive athlete may occur at the time of initial diagnosis.
Patient Education
The patient should be advised to:
  • Elevate the leg frequently to minimize forefoot edema
  • Use ice up to 20 min/hr to control swelling
  • Notify the physician if there is any significant increase in pain/swelling during the recovery process
  • Reduce their activity level to remain pain-free and use stiff-soled shoe for all weight-bearing activity until healing is complete
Prognosis
Good
Codes
ICD9
  • 825.0 Fracture of calcaneus, closed
  • 825.20 Fracture of unspecified bone(s) of foot (except toes), closed
  • 825.21 Fracture of astragalus, closed


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