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GROWTH AFTER EXTENDIBLE ENDOPROSTHETIC REPLACEMENT OF THE DISTAL FEMUR
64
Citations
10
References
1997
Year
Distraction OsteogenesisLower Limb TraumaPathologyOsteoarthritisBone RemodelingThe Distal FemurSurgeryAffected TibiaJoint ReplacementMedicineOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryStanmore Extendible EndoprosthesisGrowth Arrest Lines
We report our results in 24 children with malignant primary bone tumours of the distal femur treated with a Stanmore extendible endoprosthesis (SEER). This consists of a femoral component that can be lengthened, a constrained knee and an uncemented sliding tibial component which crosses the proximal tibial physeal plate perpendicularly. The average age of the patients at diagnosis was ten years and the mean follow-up was 4.7 years (2.5 to 7.9). The mean growth of the affected tibia was 76% (18 to 136) and of the fibula 83% (15 to 750) of the growth of the unaffected limb. Measurement of growth arrest lines showed that the mean growth of the proximal tibial physis on the affected side was 69% (43 to 100) of that of the normal side. The great variability in the growth of the physis cannot yet be explained.
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