Talocalcaneal + Talonavicular Disruption | Medial Commonest | Basketball Foot
INJURY CLASSIFICATION
Critical Must-Knows
- Medial dislocation: foot inverted and plantarflexed with axial load (basketball foot)
- Urgent closed reduction under sedation or anaesthesia within hours
- Post-reduction CT essential to identify associated talar, calcaneal or navicular fractures
- Open injuries require emergent irrigation, debridement and intravenous antibiotics
- Stiffness and subtalar arthrosis are the most common long-term sequelae
Clinical Pearls
- "Medial: heel displaced medially, foot supinated, prominent lateral talar head
- "Lateral: heel displaced laterally, foot pronated, prominent medial talar head
- "Always obtain CT after reduction before casting or fixation decisions
- "Open medial wound often communicates with subtalar joint
Clinical Imaging
Subtalar Dislocation Patterns and Post-Reduction Assessment
Critical Subtalar Dislocation Exam and Reduction Points
Medial Pattern
Most common (70-80 percent). Axial load on inverted, plantarflexed foot. Heel displaced medially. Prominent lateral talar head. Urgent closed reduction essential.
Lateral Pattern
Higher energy. Axial load on everted foot. Heel displaced laterally. Prominent medial talar head. More likely irreducible or requires open reduction.
Reduction Urgency
Perform within hours. Prolonged dislocation risks skin necrosis, neurovascular compromise and chondral damage. Sedation or regional anaesthesia often required.
Post-Reduction CT
Mandatory in all cases. Identifies occult associated fractures (talus, calcaneus, navicular, cuboid) that change management from casting to ORIF.
Quick Decision Guide
| Presentation | Diagnosis | Treatment | Key Pearl |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medial closed dislocation, low energy | Clinical + pre-reduction X-ray | Closed reduction + below-knee cast 4-6 weeks | CT post reduction to exclude fracture |
| Lateral or irreducible dislocation | Failed closed reduction attempt | Open reduction +/- internal fixation | Higher rate of associated fracture |
| Open subtalar dislocation | Wound over medial or lateral malleolus | Emergent debridement, reduction, IV antibiotics | 25 percent of all cases, worse prognosis |
INVERTMedial Subtalar Dislocation Mechanism
| I | Inversion force Foot supinated at moment of injury |
| N | Navicular displaces Talonavicular joint dislocates medially |
| V | Volarflexed talus Talar head locked lateral to navicular |
| E | Eversion blocked Calcaneus rotates medially under talus |
| R | Reduction required Urgent closed manoeuvre under anaesthesia |
| T | Talocalcaneal rupture Interosseous ligament and capsule tear |
| I | Inversion force Foot supinated at moment of injury | V | Volarflexed talus Talar head locked lateral to navicular | R | Reduction required Urgent closed manoeuvre under anaesthesia |
| N | Navicular displaces Talonavicular joint dislocates medially | E | Eversion blocked Calcaneus rotates medially under talus | T | Talocalcaneal rupture Interosseous ligament and capsule tear |
Hook:Medial subtalar dislocation follows an INVERT mechanism - most common pattern!
EVERtLateral Subtalar Dislocation Features
| E | Eversion force Foot pronated, higher energy trauma |
| V | Volar talar head Talar head prominent medially |
| E | Extensor tendons May block reduction, require open release |
| R | Rare pattern Only 20-30 percent of subtalar dislocations |
| t | Talonavicular locked Calcaneus displaced laterally under talus |
| E | Eversion force Foot pronated, higher energy trauma | R | Rare pattern Only 20-30 percent of subtalar dislocations |
| V | Volar talar head Talar head prominent medially | t | Talonavicular locked Calcaneus displaced laterally under talus |
| E | Extensor tendons May block reduction, require open release |
Hook:Lateral = EVERt force, more irreducible, higher fracture association!
CT SCANPost Reduction Protocol
| C | CT mandatory Assess talus, calcaneus, navicular, cuboid |
| T | Talar dome check Rule out osteochondral injury or loose body |
| S | Subtalar congruity Confirm anatomic reduction of both joints |
| C | Cast or fix Stable closed = cast 4-6 weeks; unstable = ORIF |
| A | Antibiotics open Open injuries require 24-48 hours IV therapy |
| N | Neurovascular exam Document before and after reduction |
| C | CT mandatory Assess talus, calcaneus, navicular, cuboid | S | Subtalar congruity Confirm anatomic reduction of both joints | A | Antibiotics open Open injuries require 24-48 hours IV therapy |
| T | Talar dome check Rule out osteochondral injury or loose body | C | Cast or fix Stable closed = cast 4-6 weeks; unstable = ORIF | N | Neurovascular exam Document before and after reduction |
Hook:CT SCAN after every subtalar reduction before final decision!
Overview and Epidemiology
Why This Matters
Subtalar dislocation is a rare but high-stakes injury that demands immediate recognition and reduction. Medial pattern accounts for 70-80 percent of cases and is classically described as "basketball foot" from axial load on an inverted plantarflexed foot. Delayed reduction risks skin necrosis, neurovascular injury and irreversible chondral damage. Post-reduction CT is non-negotiable because up to 50 percent of cases have associated fractures that alter treatment from simple casting to surgical fixation.
Mechanism of Injury
- Medial (70-80 percent): Axial load + inversion + plantarflexion (basketball, fall from height)
- Lateral (20-30 percent): Axial load + eversion (higher energy, motor vehicle collision)
- Open injuries: 25 percent overall, medial wound most common in medial pattern
- Associated fractures: Talus, calcaneus, navicular, cuboid in up to 50 percent
Clinical Impact
- Stiffness: Subtalar and midfoot motion loss in majority of patients
- Arthrosis: Subtalar and talonavicular joint degeneration common
- Infection: Open injuries carry 10-15 percent deep infection risk
- AVN talus: Rare but reported after prolonged dislocation
Pathophysiology
Joint Anatomy and Ligamentous Disruption
The subtalar joint comprises the talocalcaneal articulations (posterior, middle and anterior facets) and the talonavicular joint. The interosseous talocalcaneal ligament, cervical ligament, and spring ligament complex provide stability. In subtalar dislocation both the talocalcaneal and talonavicular joints dislocate while the tibiotalar joint remains reduced. The interosseous ligament and capsule tear, allowing the calcaneus and navicular to displace as a unit around the talus. Medial displacement rotates the calcaneus internally; lateral displacement rotates it externally. Prolonged dislocation stretches remaining soft tissues and risks chondral injury to the talar and calcaneal articular surfaces.
Medial Dislocation Pathomechanics
Force vector: Axial load drives talar head laterally while calcaneus and navicular displace medially. The talar head locks lateral to the navicular. The posterior tibial tendon may block reduction. Skin over the prominent lateral talar head is at risk of necrosis.
Lateral Dislocation Pathomechanics
Force vector: Axial load drives talar head medially while calcaneus and navicular displace laterally. The talar head becomes prominent medially. Extensor tendons or peroneal tendons may block reduction, necessitating open reduction more frequently than in medial pattern.
Classification and Types
Classification by Direction
| Type | Frequency | Mechanism | Reduction Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medial | 70-80 percent | Inversion + plantarflexion + axial load | Usually closed reduction successful |
| Lateral | 20-30 percent | Eversion + axial load | Higher rate of open reduction needed |
| Posterior | Rare (less than 5 percent) | Hyperplantarflexion | Often requires open reduction |
| Anterior | Very rare | Hyperdorsiflexion | Usually open reduction |
Direction determines both reduction strategy and associated injury profile.
Clinical Assessment
History
- Mechanism: Axial load with inversion (medial) or eversion (lateral)
- Timing: Time since injury critical for skin viability
- Pain: Severe midfoot and hindfoot pain, inability to bear weight
- Associated injuries: Rule out ipsilateral limb or spinal injury in high-energy trauma
Examination
- Inspect: Deformity of heel, skin tenting or open wound, swelling
- Palpate: Prominent talar head (lateral in medial dislocation), pulses, sensation
- Range: Ankle and subtalar motion blocked by dislocation
- Neurovascular: Document before and after reduction
Reduction Technique for Medial Subtalar Dislocation
Position: Patient supine, knee flexed to relax gastrocnemius.
Technique: Apply longitudinal traction to the foot with the knee flexed. Accentuate the deformity (further inversion and plantarflexion), then evert and dorsiflex the foot while applying direct pressure over the prominent lateral talar head. A palpable clunk indicates successful reduction of both talonavicular and talocalcaneal joints.
Post reduction: Confirm with fluoroscopy or X-ray, then obtain CT.
Clinical Differentiation of Medial versus Lateral Pattern
| Feature | Medial Dislocation | Lateral Dislocation |
|---|---|---|
| Heel position | Displaced medially, supinated foot | Displaced laterally, pronated foot |
| Talar head | Prominent laterally | Prominent medially |
| Reduction block | Posterior tibial tendon, capsule | Extensor tendons, peroneals |
| Associated fracture rate | Lower (approximately 30 percent) | Higher (approximately 60 percent) |
Investigations
Imaging Protocol
Views: AP, lateral and oblique of ankle and foot
Look for: Direction of dislocation, associated malleolar or talar fractures, talar head position relative to navicular
Clinical correlation: Do not delay reduction for advanced imaging in closed injuries
Indication: Every subtalar dislocation after successful or attempted reduction
Findings: Occult talar dome or lateral process fractures, calcaneal anterior process fracture, navicular or cuboid fracture, loose bodies, residual subluxation
Threshold: Any intra-articular step greater than 2 mm or displaced fracture fragment greater than 5 mm warrants ORIF consideration
MRI: Rarely needed acutely; consider for suspected chondral injury or ligament assessment in chronic cases
Angiography: Only if vascular injury suspected (absent pulses after reduction)
Imaging Pearl
Plain radiographs confirm the diagnosis but underestimate associated fractures. CT is mandatory after reduction because up to half of patients have fractures that change management from non-operative casting to surgical fixation. Do not cast or discharge without CT.
Management Algorithm
Closed Medial Subtalar Dislocation
Goal: Anatomic reduction within hours, then CT to guide definitive care
Treatment Protocol
Reduction: Closed under sedation or regional anaesthesia Confirmation: Fluoroscopy or portable X-ray CT: Within 24 hours to assess associated fractures
Immobilisation: Below-knee cast or removable boot, non-weight-bearing 4-6 weeks Follow-up: Weekly X-ray for first 2 weeks to confirm maintenance of reduction Rehabilitation: Subtalar and midfoot ROM exercises after cast removal
ORIF: Percutaneous or open reduction of associated fractures (talus lateral process, calcaneal anterior process, navicular) Fixation: Headless compression screws or mini-fragment plates Post-op: Non-weight-bearing cast or boot 6-8 weeks
Reduction Pearl
Flex the knee to relax the gastrocnemius, apply longitudinal traction, accentuate the deformity, then reverse the deformity while pushing the talar head. If closed reduction fails after two attempts, proceed to open reduction rather than repeated forceful manipulation.
Complications
| Complication | Incidence | Risk Factors | Management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subtalar stiffness | Greater than 70 percent of patients | Prolonged immobilisation, associated fracture | Early ROM exercises, subtalar mobilisation |
| Subtalar arthrosis | 30-50 percent at 5 years | Chondral injury, residual incongruity | Activity modification, injections, eventual arthrodesis |
| Infection (open injuries) | 10-15 percent | High-grade open wound, delayed debridement | Serial debridement, culture-directed antibiotics, flap coverage |
| Talar avascular necrosis | Less than 5 percent | Prolonged dislocation, talar neck fracture | Non-weight-bearing, MRI surveillance, core decompression if early |
| Recurrent instability | Rare (less than 5 percent) | Missed ligamentous injury, inadequate reduction | Subtalar arthrodesis or ligament reconstruction |
Prevention of Long-Term Stiffness
The most common and functionally limiting complication is subtalar and midfoot stiffness. Early supervised range-of-motion exercises once the soft-tissue envelope permits, combined with custom orthoses to support the medial arch, can mitigate but not eliminate this risk. Patients should be counselled pre-operatively that normal subtalar motion is rarely restored.
Outcomes and Prognosis
Outcomes by Injury Pattern and Treatment Timing
| Pattern / Timing | Treatment | Expected Outcome | Long-term Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Closed medial, early reduction | Cast 4-6 weeks +/- ORIF of fracture | 70-80 percent good-excellent, mild stiffness | Return to sport possible but subtalar motion reduced |
| Lateral or delayed reduction | Open reduction, possible external fixation | 50-60 percent good-excellent, significant stiffness | Limited recreational activity, early arthrosis |
| Open injury | Debridement + reduction + staged coverage | 30-50 percent eventual arthrodesis rate | Chronic pain and stiffness common |
Prognostic Factors
Best prognosis: Closed medial pattern, reduction within 6 hours, no associated fracture, compliant rehabilitation.
Poor prognosis: Open injury, lateral pattern, associated intra-articular fracture, delayed reduction greater than 24 hours.
Key threshold: Time to reduction - outcomes decline sharply after 6-8 hours of dislocation.
Evidence Base and Key Trials
Subtalar dislocation: long-term results
- Retrospective review of 32 subtalar dislocations with mean 5.5-year follow-up
- Medial pattern predominated (75 percent); 25 percent open injuries
- Subtalar arthrosis developed in 50 percent; 25 percent required subtalar arthrodesis
- Early reduction and absence of associated fracture correlated with better outcomes
Open subtalar dislocations: results after aggressive treatment
- Classic series of 15 open subtalar dislocations treated with immediate debridement and reduction
- Infection rate 13 percent despite aggressive protocol
- All patients had significant subtalar stiffness at final follow-up
- Emphasised importance of delayed wound closure and prolonged antibiotics
CT evaluation of subtalar dislocations
- Early recognition that plain radiographs miss up to 40 percent of associated fractures
- CT demonstrated talar dome, lateral process and calcaneal anterior process fractures in majority of cases
- Changed management in 30 percent of patients from non-operative to operative fixation
- Recommended routine post-reduction CT in all subtalar dislocations
Basketball foot: mechanism and outcomes of subtalar dislocation
- Described the classic low-energy medial subtalar dislocation mechanism in basketball players
- Axial load on inverted, plantarflexed foot produces medial dislocation without fracture in 60 percent
- Early closed reduction yielded 80 percent good results with minimal arthrosis at 2 years
- Highlighted the importance of prompt recognition on the court or sideline
Lateral subtalar dislocation: a rare but challenging injury
- Retrospective series of 12 lateral subtalar dislocations
- Higher associated fracture rate (67 percent) and open reduction rate (50 percent) than medial pattern
- Extensor tendon interposition was the most common block to closed reduction
- Long-term subtalar arthrosis in 75 percent of cases
Exam Viva Scenarios
Use these scenarios to practise clinical reasoning and management decisions
Scenario 1: Closed Medial Subtalar Dislocation
"A 24-year-old basketball player lands awkwardly after a jump and presents with severe midfoot pain and deformity. The heel is displaced medially and the foot is supinated. Pulses are intact. X-rays confirm medial subtalar dislocation with no obvious fracture. Describe your management."
Scenario 2: Open Lateral Subtalar Dislocation
"A 35-year-old motorcyclist sustains a high-energy injury with an open wound over the medial malleolus. The heel is displaced laterally and the talar head is prominent medially. Pulses are present but the foot is swollen. How would you manage this patient?"
Guidelines, Registries & Global Practice
Global Epidemiology
- Medial pattern dominates worldwide (70-80 percent) regardless of region or mechanism
- Low-energy basketball foot is the classic presentation in athletic populations globally
- High-energy open injuries predominate in road-traffic settings in low- and middle-income countries
- Associated fracture rate consistently reported at 40-60 percent when CT is routine
Practice Variation by Resource Setting
- High-resource: Immediate CT, dedicated foot-ankle teams, negative-pressure wound therapy for open injuries
- Limited-resource: Closed reduction under ketamine, plain-film assessment, prolonged casting when CT unavailable
- Universal principle: Time to reduction is the single modifiable factor that most influences outcome
- Surgery: ORIF reserved for displaced intra-articular fractures or irreducible dislocations
Society and Reference Guidance (Side by Side)
| Source | Diagnosis emphasis | Acute treatment | Surgery / reconstruction |
|---|---|---|---|
| AO Foundation / OTA | CT mandatory after reduction to classify associated fractures | Urgent closed reduction, external fixation for open or unstable injuries | Anatomic reduction of talar and calcaneal articular surfaces |
| BOA / BOSTA (UK) | Clinical diagnosis + plain films; CT for surgical planning | Reduction within 6 hours, below-knee cast for stable closed injuries | ORIF for displaced fractures greater than 2 mm step-off |
| AAOS / AOFAS (US) | High index of suspicion in axial-load foot injuries | Sedation or block reduction, CT within 24 hours | Percutaneous or open fixation of lateral process and anterior process fractures |
| EFORT / European units | MRI rarely used acutely; CT sufficient for decision-making | Open injuries managed in dedicated trauma centres with plastic input | Subtalar arthrodesis as salvage for post-traumatic arthrosis |
Registry and Evidence Note
There is no dedicated international registry for subtalar dislocations. Evidence is drawn from small retrospective series and expert consensus. The consistent message across guidelines is that prompt reduction and routine post-reduction CT are the two interventions that most improve outcome. Open injuries remain a major source of morbidity worldwide.
Controversies & Areas of Uncertainty
Optimal immobilisation duration
Four versus six weeks of non-weight-bearing cast is debated. Shorter duration may reduce stiffness but risks re-dislocation if ligaments have not healed. Most surgeons favour 4-6 weeks with serial radiographic monitoring.
Role of subtalar arthroscopy
Arthroscopic-assisted reduction and debridement of loose bodies has been described in small series. No comparative data exist versus open techniques; adoption remains limited to specialist centres.
Prophylactic antibiotics in closed injuries
Routine antibiotics are not indicated for closed subtalar dislocations. Some centres administer a single dose at reduction in high-energy or polytrauma settings, but evidence is anecdotal.
Timing of weight-bearing after ORIF
Weight-bearing protocols range from 6 to 12 weeks depending on fracture fixation quality and soft-tissue status. No high-quality evidence defines the safest threshold.
SUBTALAR DISLOCATION
Clinical summary
Key Anatomy and Patterns
- •Medial (70-80 percent): inversion + plantarflexion + axial load (basketball foot)
- •Lateral (20-30 percent): eversion + axial load, higher fracture and open reduction rate
- •Both talocalcaneal and talonavicular joints dislocate while tibiotalar remains reduced
- •Interosseous talocalcaneal ligament and capsule rupture allow displacement
Diagnosis and Urgency
- •Clinical: heel displacement direction, prominent talar head, skin tenting
- •Urgent closed reduction within 6 hours under sedation or anaesthesia
- •Post-reduction CT mandatory to detect associated talar, calcaneal, navicular fractures
- •Open injuries (25 percent) require emergent debridement within 6-12 hours
Treatment Algorithm
- •Closed medial, stable, no fracture: below-knee cast 4-6 weeks non-weight-bearing
- •Associated fracture or unstable: ORIF with headless screws or mini-plates
- •Open injury: debridement, reduction, external fixation if needed, delayed closure
- •Failed closed reduction: open reduction, address tendon interposition
Complications and Prognosis
- •Subtalar stiffness greater than 70 percent; arthrosis 30-50 percent at 5 years
- •Infection 10-15 percent in open injuries; talar AVN less than 5 percent
- •Best outcome: early reduction, closed medial, no fracture
- •Salvage: subtalar arthrodesis for symptomatic arthrosis