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Prolongation of Ambulation in Children with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy by Subcutaneous Lower Limb Tenotomy

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1993

Year

Abstract

To assess the effect of subcutaneous (s.c.) lower limb tenotomies on the ambulatory ability of patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), 54 patients were followed. Twenty-nine patients underwent hip, knee, and ankle tenotomies at a mean age of 10 2/12 years and were followed postoperatively for an average of 3 9/12 years. These children continued ambulation in long-leg braces to a mean age of 12 8/12 years and stood to an average of 13 5/12 years. Contracture correction was 49% at the hip, 58% at the knee, and 100% at the ankle. A separate group of 25 children to whom operation was offered but declined, was followed: these children ceased ambulating at a mean age of 10 years and ceased standing at a mean age of 10 2/12 years. Thus, we propose that s.c. tenotomy is effective in allowing braced ambulation well beyond what the natural history would allow.