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Treatment of Late-Onset Tibia Vara Using Afghan Percutaneous Osteotomy and Orthofix External Fixation
37
Citations
30
References
2000
Year
Limb ReconstructionAfghan OsteotomyRadiographic CorrectionLower Limb TraumaSurgeryOrthopaedic SurgeryExternal FixationApplied AnatomyOperative TreatmentOrthopaedicsMaxillofacial SurgeryHealth SciencesSpinal Cord InjuryOrthofix External FixationAnkle TraumaLimb RestorationSurgical StabilizationCraniofacial SurgeryMedicinePostoperative Consideration
The Afghan osteotomy was combined with external fixation on 19 patients (23 extremities) with late-onset tibia vara. The average weight was 258 lb and all patients weighed >95th percentile. The average preoperative deformity was 28.2°. The average intraoperative correction was 27.6°. Average healing time was 141 days. The mean follow-up was 2.7 years. Based on radiographic correction, at long-term follow-up, there were 15 excellent, two fair, and six poor results. The quality of the initial correction was the only significant variable, and it was borderline (p = 0.0587). Complications included loss of alignment, peroneal nerve palsy, superficial pin tract infection, deep infection, and fracture. This method offers a technically simple procedure with a relatively low complication rate. It allows early mobilization and provides the ability to manipulate the correction postoperatively. An excellent long-term outcome is predicated on achieving an acceptable initial correction as determined by intraoperative mechanical axis radiographs.
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