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General Orthopaedics

BONE TRANSPORT AND TIBIOTALAR ARTHRODESIS FOR POST-TRAUMATIC DISTAL TIBIAL INFECTION

European Bone and Joint Infection Society (EBJIS) meeting, Antwerp, Belgium, September 2019.



Abstract

Aim

Post traumatic distal tibia osteomyelitis (DTOM) with an upper ankle joint involvement is a serious complication after primary osteosynthesis and can be a nightmare for the patient and the surgeon as well. Our aim was to identify mayor complications during treatment and to find the way to prevent or treat them.

Method

It is a retrospective analysis of eight patients with DTOM and an upper ankle joint involvement treated in our institution from 2012 to 2018. The average size of a bone defect after a debridement was 9 centimeters (4–15). Patients were treated in two stages. First stage was segmental bone resection, external fixation and soft tissue envelope reconstruction if necessary. At second stage a distraction frame was applied and proximal corticotomy performed. In all but one case a circular frame was used.

Results

We have had one major intra-operative complication, an injury of arteria tibialis posterior during the corticotomy procedure. Except in one patient we did not observe major problems with pin-track infections. Despite bone-grafting in all patients, we observed three nonunions of docking site. We treated them by external fixator in two and retrograde intramedullar nail in one case.

In two patient the distraction callus was weak. We had to bone graft and secure the callus with a plate in one and use a retrograde reamed intramedullar nail in second patient.

We have observed two callus fracture after removal of the frame. A surgery was needed for both because of the deformation. The first patient was treated by new external frame, the second by retrograde reamed intramedullar nail.

Conclusions

Callus distraction is a valuable option to treat a bone defect. The procedure has many possible problems and complications, especially during treatment of defects larger than six centimeters. It is very difficult for patients to tolerate a frame more than one year. We have found the use of an intramedullar tibial nail inserted in a retrograde way as a helpful option not just to shorten the time of external frame, but in combination with reaming also to accelerate the healing of the distraction callus and the upper ankle joint arthrodesis as well.


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