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Arthrodesis of the knee with a vascularized fibular rotatory graft.
73
Citations
17
References
1995
Year
RheumatologySolid FusionOperative TreatmentOsteoarthritisOrthopaedicsKnee InjuriesSurgeryProsthetic Joint InfectionsArthroscopic TechniqueVascularized GraftVascularized Bone GraftJoint ReplacementMedicineMusculoskeletal SurgeryOrthopaedic SurgeryRheumatoid ArthritisThirteen Patients
We retrospectively reviewed the records of thirteen patients who had been managed with an arthrodesis of the knee with use of a vascularized graft from the ipsilateral fibula and fixation with an intramedullary rod. The indications for the operation included a large skeletal defect secondary to the resection of a tumor about the knee in eight patients, an infection at the site of an arthroplasty in four (with failure of a previous conventional arthrodesis in three of the four), and severe rheumatoid gonarthrosis as well as a persistent non-union of the distal part of the femur in one. The average age of the patients at the time of the operation was forty-three years (range, twenty-six to seventy-six years). Most of the patients had had multiple previous procedures (thirty-three operations had been performed in ten patients). Twelve of the thirteen patients had a solid fusion and a successful result after an average duration of follow-up of fifty-one months (range, eight to ninety-three months). The remaining patient, who had had four previous arthroplasties, had a recurrence of an infection seven months after the operation and was managed with an amputation. Six complications--including two superficial wound infections, one deep wound infection, one deep venous thrombosis, one transient peroneal-nerve palsy, and one delayed union--occurred in three patients.
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