Long term follow-up evaluation of combined surgery for congenital tibial pseudarthrosis in children.
10.3760/cma.j.cn112139-20230205-00051
- Author:
Y X LIU
1
,
2
;
G YANG
1
,
2
;
X K HU
1
,
2
;
Q TAN
1
,
2
;
H PAN
1
,
2
;
K LIU
1
,
2
;
Y Y HUANG
1
,
2
;
A YAN
1
,
2
;
G H ZHU
1
,
2
;
H B MEI
1
,
2
Author Information
1. Department of Pediatric Orthopedics, Hunan Children's Hospital
2. the School of Pediatrics, University of South China, Changsha 410007, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Male;
Female;
Humans;
Child;
Child, Preschool;
Pseudarthrosis/congenital*;
Follow-Up Studies;
Retrospective Studies;
Tibia/surgery*;
Neurofibromatosis 1;
Tibial Fractures/surgery*
- From:
Chinese Journal of Surgery
2023;61(8):675-680
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective: To explore the long-term effect of combined surgery for the treatment of congenital tibial pseudarthrosis in children. Methods: The clinical data of 44 children with congenital tibial pseudarthrosis who underwent combined surgery (tibial pseudarthrosis tissue resection, intramedullary rod fixation, Ilizarov external fixator fixation, wrapped autologous iliac bone graft) from August 2007 to October 2011 at the Department of Pediatric Orthopedics, Hunan Children's Hospital were collected retrospectively. There were 33 males and 11 females. The age at the time of surgery was (3.7±2.2)years (range:0.6 to 12.4 years), including 25 cases under 3 years old and 19 cases above 3 years old.Among them, 37 cases were complicated with neurofibromatosis type 1.The operation status, postoperative complications and follow-up results were recorded. Results: The follow-up time after surgery was (10.9±0.7)years (range:10 to 11 years).Thirty-nine out of 44 patients (88.6%) achieved initial healing of tibial pseudarthrosis, with an average healing time of (4.3±1.1)months (range:3 to 10months).In the last follow-up, 36 cases (81.8%) had unequal tibial length, 20 cases (45.4%) had refractures, 18 cases (40.9%) had ankle valgus, 9 cases (20.4%) had proximal tibial valgus, and 11 cases (25.0%) had high arched feet.Nine cases (20.4%) developed distal tibial epiphyseal plate bridging.17 cases (38.6%) had abnormal tibial mechanical axis.Seven cases (15.9%) developed needle infection, and one case (2.3%) developed tibial osteomyelitis. 21 patients (47.7%) had excessive growth of the affected femur.Five patients (11.3%) had ankle stiffness, and 34 patients (77.2%) had intramedullary rod displacement that was not in the center of the tibial medullary cavity.Among them, 8 cases (18.1%) protruded the tibial bone cortex and underwent intramedullary rod removal.18 children have reached skeletal maturity, while 26 children have not been followed up until skeletal maturity. Conclusion: Combined surgery for the treatment of congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia in children has a high initial healing rate, but complications such as unequal tibia length, refracture, and ankle valgus occur during long-term follow-up, requiring multiple surgical treatments.