This patient support community is for discussions relating to orthopedics, back pain, bone or joint pain, broken bones, carpal tunnel syndrome, hip or knee replacement, neck and shoulder pain, orthopedic surgery, osteoporosis, spinal injury, sports injury, and tennis elbow.
There exists a subpopulation of patients sustaining these fibular fractures who develop symptomatic incomplete union or nonunion despite appropriate management, and later require operative intervention to eliminate pain.
The treatment of nonunion is to reverse the conditions which may predispose; freshen up the area to allow a new blood supply to grow in, immobilise the fracture, and use bone graft to give the process of ossification a good start. Most often this means surgery with bone grafting and exchange of hardware.You should consult your orthopedic physician regarding this option.
Surgical stabilization of fibular nonunion seems to be a reliable means of resolving these symptoms when conservative measures fail.
[Reference- http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=15948400]
Regards