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General Orthopaedics

THE EFFECTS OF DUAL PLATING ON THE VASCULARITY OF THE DISTAL FEMUR

The Canadian Orthopaedic Association (COA) and The International Combined Orthopaedic Research Societies (ICORS) Meeting, Montreal, Canada, June 2019. Part 2.



Abstract

Dual plating of the medial and lateral distal femur has been proposed to reduce angular malunion and hardware failure secondary to delayed union or nonunion. This strategy improves the strength and alignment of the construct, but it may compromise the vascularity of the distal femur paradoxically impairing healing. This study investigates the effect of dual plating versus single plating on the perfusion of the distal femur.

Ten matched pairs of fresh-frozen cadaveric lower extremities were assigned to either isolated lateral plating or dual plating of a single limb. The contralateral lower extremity was used as a matched control. A distal femoral locking plate was applied to the lateral side of ten legs using a standard sub-vastus approach. Five femurs had an additional 3.5mm reconstruction plate applied to the medial aspect of the distal femur using a medial sub-vastus approach.

The superficial femoral artery and the profunda femoris were cannulated at the level of the femoral head. Gadolinium MRI contrast solution (3:1 gadolinium to saline ration) was injected through the arterial cannula. High resolution fat-suppressed 3D gradient echo sequences were completed both with and without gadolinium contrast. Intra-osseous contributions were quantified within a standardized region of interest (ROI) using customized IDL 6.4 software (Exelis, Boulder, CO). Perfusion of the distal femur was assessed in six different zones. The signal intensity on MRI was then quantified in the distal femur and comparison was made between the experimental plated limb and the contralateral, control limb. Following completion of the MRI protocol, the specimens were injected with latex medium and the extra-osseous vasculature was dissected.

Quantitative MRI revealed that application of the lateral distal femoral locking plate reduced the perfusion of the distal femur by 21.7%. Within the dual plating group there was a reduction in perfusion by 24%. There was no significant difference in the perfusion between the isolated lateral plate and the dual plating groups. There were no regional differences in perfusion between the epiphyseal, metaphyseal or meta-diaphyseal regions.

Specimen dissection in both plating groups revealed complete destruction of any periosteal vessels that ran underneath either the medial or lateral plates. Multiple small vessels enter the posterior condyles off both superior medial and lateral geniculate arteries and were preserved in all specimens. Furthermore, there was retrograde flow to the distal most aspect of the condyles medially and laterally via the inferior geniculate arteries. The medial vascular pedicle was proximal to the medial plate in all the dual plated specimens and was not disrupted by the medial sub-vastus approach in any specimens.

Fixation of the distal femur via a lateral sub-vastus approach and application of a lateral locking plate results in a 21% reduction in perfusion to the distal femur. The addition of a medial 3.5mm reconstruction plate does not significantly compromise the vascularity of the distal femur. The majority of the vascular insult secondary to open reduction, internal fixation of the distal femur occurs with application of the lateral locking plate.


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