• OBJECTIVES
    • To locate the proper insertion point for a tibial intramedullary nail in the coronal plane.
  • DESIGN
    • Fifty-seven cadaveric lower legs were disarticulated at the knee and ankle and stripped of their soft tissue. Each tibia was nailed in a retrograde fashion through the center of the tibial plafond with a seven-millimeter sharp-tipped rod through the proximal tibia. The exit point of the nail was measured in the coronal plane in relation to the tibial tubercle.
  • RESULTS
    • Except for one tibia, the intramedullary nail exit point was always located medial to the center of the tibial tubercle with the average being eight millimeters +/- six millimeters medial to the center of the tibial tubercle. Forty-six percent of the nails exited medial to the whole tibial tubercle.
  • CONCLUSIONS
    • The insertion point of a tibial nail should be over the medial aspect of the tibial tubercle in the coronal plane. Our data supports using a medial or patellar splitting approach for nail insertion. Insertion sites lateral to the tibial tubercle should be avoided.