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International Orthopaedics - 2026-05-07 - Journal Article; Review

Posterior tibial plateau fractures: distinguishing valgus and varus patterns to guide surgical management.

Hiraoka A, Assink N, De Ridder N, Ijpma FFA, Hoekstra H

systematic reviewLOE Vn = N/AN/A

Topics

traumasportsarthroplasty
PMID: 42091624DOI: 10.1007/s00264-026-06827-xView on PubMed ->

Key Takeaway

Flexion-varus tibial plateau fractures carry significantly higher rates of combined ligamentous and meniscal injury and greater risk of TKA conversion compared to flexion-valgus injuries, demanding distinct surgical strategies.

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Summary

This narrative review distinguishes flexion-valgus from flexion-varus posterior tibial plateau fracture patterns based on morphology, soft-tissue injury profiles, and treatment principles. Flexion-valgus injuries produce posterolateral split-depression or rim impaction fractures with ACL and lateral meniscus involvement, while flexion-varus injuries generate posteromedial shear fractures with metaphyseal comminution frequently extending to the posterolateral central segment. Flexion-varus injuries demonstrate higher rates of combined ligamentous and meniscal pathology, worse functional outcomes, and increased TKA conversion risk.

Key Limitation

As a narrative review without a defined search protocol or quantitative synthesis, the conclusions on outcome differences between flexion-valgus and flexion-varus patterns are not supported by pooled comparative data.

Original Abstract

BACKGROUND

Tibial plateau fractures (TPFs) remain challenging injuries due to their complex three-dimensional morphology, frequent posterior column involvement, and high incidence of associated soft-tissue lesions.

PURPOSE

Flexion-type fractures represent a distinct and often under recognized entity that is inadequately addressed using traditional classification systems. Flexion-valgus and flexion-varus mechanisms generate fundamentally different fracture configurations and soft-tissue injury profiles, with important implications for surgical management and prognosis. This narrative review provides a practical, literature- and experience-based overview of the distinguishing features of flexion-valgus and flexion-varus tibial plateau fractures, focusing on fracture morphology, associated ligamentous and meniscal injuries, and key treatment principles.

RESULTS

Flexion-valgus injuries predominantly involve the posterolateral tibial plateau, commonly presenting as split-depression or rim impaction fractures, and are frequently associated with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and lateral meniscal pathology. In contrast, flexion-varus injuries typically result in posteromedial shear fractures with metaphyseal comminution, often extending into the posterolateral central segment, demonstrating significantly higher rates of concomitant ligamentous and meniscal injuries, poorer functional outcomes, and increased risk of conversion to total knee arthroplasty (TKA).

CONCLUSION

Accurate recognition of the underlying injury mechanism and fracture morphology, distinguishing flexion-valgus from flexion-varus injuries, is essential to guide preoperative planning, surgical exposure, fixation strategy, and soft-tissue management, with the goal of optimising clinical outcomes.