After an injury or undergoing foot/ankle surgery, patients often experience swelling in the injured area. Under current standard of care, plaster casts are removed at six weeks and patients are put in a walking boot. At this point in time of their recovery, patients are permitted to weight bear and move in their walking boot without other help, like crutches. This has shown to cause a significant amount of swelling in the ankle and foot between week six and twenty-six post-injury/surgery. There is not much research that has looked at the effects of compression on reducing swelling in post-operative and non-operative ankle fracture, mid-foot, hindfoot, or ankle arthrodesis. This research is important because post-injury swelling can lead to wound complications and limit functionality. Therefore, finding new ways to reduce swelling could help prevent future complications. The purpose of this study is to see if the Bauerfeind ankle compression sleeve is a safe post-operative/injury foot and ankle swelling management tool. Use of a compression sleeve will be compared to just using a walking boot, which is current standard of care, to determine if the compression sleeve reduces post-operative/injury foot and ankle swelling. The study will follow patients improvement in swelling and pain. The compression sleeve will also be assessed for product safety. Safety is determined by watching the frequency, severity and seriousness of any side effects or complications, known as adverse events, that may be experienced while in the study. The Bauerfeind ankle compression sleeve has been and is currently used in humans as a swelling reducing devise in the foot and ankle but has not been studied in a randomized control trial.
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Swelling (volume)
Timeframe: 6 weeks, 12 weeks, and 24 weeks post-injury/post-operative