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General Orthopaedics

CORRECTION OF DEFORMITY: WHEN IT'S NOT QUITE RIGHT

Current Concepts in Joint Replacement (CCJR) – Winter 2014



Abstract

Deformity can be associated with significant bone loss, ligament laxity, soft-tissue contractures, distortion of long bone morphology, and extra-articular deformity. Correction of varus, valgus, or flexion deformity requires soft tissue releases in conjunction with bone cuts perpendicular to the long axes of the femur and tibia. Cruciate-retaining or -substituting implants can be used based on surgeon preference if the ligaments are well balanced. However, in presence of severe deformity, additional measures may be warranted to achieve alignment and balance. TKA then becomes a more challenging proposition and may require the surgeon to perform extensive releases, adjunct osteotomies and deploy more constrained implants. Merely enhancing constraint in the implant however without attending to releases and extra-articular correction may not suffice. Certain myths in deformity correction will be presented.

Technical tips with regard to preoperative planning, i.e., whether intra-articular correction alone will suffice or extra-articular correction is required, will be highlighted. Surgical principles and methods of performing large releases, reduction osteotomy, lateral epicondylar sliding osteotomy, sliding medial condylar osteotomy, and closed wedge diaphyseal/metaphyseal osteotomy concomitantly with TKA will be illustrated with examples. Technique of performing TKA with concomitant extra-articular deformity resulting from coronal bowing of femoral or tibial diaphysis, malunited fractures, prior osteotomies, and stress fractures will be presented. The techniques reported can successfully restore alignment, pain-free motion, and stability without necessarily using more constrained implants.