Calcaneus ORIF

Open reduction and internal fixation of the heel bone to restore its height, width, and joint surfaces.

Overview

The calcaneus is your heel bone — the largest bone in your foot and the one that carries your full body weight with every step. Most calcaneus fractures happen from a hard vertical impact, almost always a fall from height where you land on your heels. The shock travels straight up through the bone and often drives a piece of it into the joint right above (the subtalar joint, where your heel meets the talus).

Surgery is considered when the fracture has shifted into the joint surface, when the heel has lost significant height, or when the bone has spread wide enough that your foot won't fit in a shoe. The goal of surgery is to put the joint surface back together cleanly and restore the heel's original shape — both matter for how your foot loads and how shoes fit.

Why it's done

Calcaneus ORIF is typically considered when imaging and the clinical picture together indicate that the fracture will not reliably heal or function without surgical stabilization. Common indications include:

  1. Displaced intra-articular fracture

    Step-off in the subtalar joint surface drives early arthritis.

  2. Loss of calcaneal height

    A shortened heel changes ankle mechanics and shoe fit.

  3. Widened or laterally displaced tuberosity

    A wide heel impinges against the peroneal tendons and the fibula.

  4. Tongue-type fractures threatening the skin

    Displaced tongue fragments can tent the skin and need urgent reduction.

How it works

Traditional fixation uses an extensile lateral approach with a pre-contoured calcaneus plate and multiple screws once the soft tissue has rested and the swelling has come down. This gives the best visualization of the posterior facet.

Minimally invasive sinus-tarsi approaches with percutaneous screw fixation are used in selected patterns to reduce wound complications. Fluoroscopy and direct inspection confirm that the subtalar joint surface is smooth and the overall calcaneal shape is restored.

Recovery

Patients are splinted initially, then placed in a boot. Strict non-weight-bearing is standard during the early healing phase because the calcaneus loads with every step. Range-of-motion exercises for the ankle and subtalar joint begin once the wound is healed. Graduated weight-bearing is added as the bone consolidates. Despite a good reduction, post-traumatic subtalar arthritis remains a known long-term risk, and subtalar fusion may be considered later if symptoms develop. Hardware is removed only if it becomes symptomatic.

Contact

For questions about this procedure or to schedule an evaluation, call the office at (830) 625-0009 or request an appointment online.

Physicians Who Perform Calcaneus ORIF

Weight-Bearing After Repair

Controlled load is part of how bone heals. Once the fracture is stabilized with hardware, gentle weight through the limb stimulates the biology that builds callus and remodels bone — completely offloading a fixed fracture for too long can actually slow healing and stiffen the joint above and below. Full body weight right away, however, can overload the construct before bone has caught up. The right answer sits in between: a partial weight-bearing progression decided by your surgeon based on your fracture pattern, the strength of the fixation, your bone quality, and how the repair looks on post-op imaging. We tell you exactly how much weight the limb can take, when to advance, and what to watch for.

Risks & Why We Still Recommend It

Every operation carries risk. The reason we offer this procedure is that the condition, left untreated, causes a wide, short heel with a collapsed posterior facet that produces chronic subtalar pain and a shoe that doesn't fit. That is the trade we are managing — not eliminating risk, but choosing the smaller of two unfavorable trajectories.

The risks we discuss with you before calcaneus ORIF include:

  • bleeding and infection (the calcaneus has a thin, fragile soft-tissue envelope — wound complications are the defining risk of this operation)
  • anesthesia risk
  • sural nerve irritation
  • blood clot (DVT/PE)
  • subtalar stiffness and eventual arthritis
  • hardware irritation
  • non-union (uncommon)

The indication to proceed is a displaced intra-articular calcaneus fracture in a patient whose soft tissues will tolerate the exposure. Patients who don't need this operation don't get it.

Further Reading

External patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background: