| Literature DB >> 18682817 |
Jendrik Hardes1, Gerhard Ulrich Exner, Dieter Rosenbaum, Arne Streitbuerger, Carsten Gebert, Georg Gosheger, Helmut Ahrens.
Abstract
Purpose. Rotationplasty has proven its efficacy in the treatment of malignant bone tumors of the lower extremity in predominantly young patients. To our knowledge this procedure has not been reported in patients over 60 years before. Materials and Methods. 3 patients over 60 years with an A1-rotationplasty because of a sarcoma were included in this study. Complications and functional results were recorded. In one patient an electromyography was done. Results. Despite electromyography showing good adaptation of the muscles to the altered function, the functional results of these three patients were limited. two out of three patients needed a cane for walking distances over 200 meters. No secondary amputation was necessary. Discussion. Our study demonstrates that rotationplasty is an alternative to an above-knee amputation in older patients but with poorer functional results in comparison to younger patients. However, limb-salvage surgery should be preferred whenever possible.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18682817 PMCID: PMC2494588 DOI: 10.1155/2008/402378
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sarcoma ISSN: 1357-714X
Patient's details.
| No. | Gender | Age at operation (years) | Diagnosis | Site of tumor | Metas-tasis | Prior operations | Radio-therapy | Chemo- therapy | Followup (months) | Stage of disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | male | 62 | Malignant schwannoma GII-III | Ventral thigh | Lung | Intralesional resection | Yes | No | 12 | DOD |
| 2 | female | 70 | Liposarcoma GIII | Ventral thigh | No | No | No | No | 6 | NED |
| 3 | female | 63 | Malignant fibrous histiocytoma GIII | Popliteal fossa | No | Intralesional resection | No | Yes | 186 | NED |
DOD: Dead of disease, NED: No evidence of disease.
Figure 1An anterior-posterior radiograph showing an A1-rotationplasty 12 years postoperatively without signs of pseudarthrosis.
Figure 2An intraoperative picture after resection of a dedifferentiated liposarcoma of the distal part of the thigh. The femoral vessels could be preserved because of no tumor infiltration. See below the vessels the sciatic nerve.
Figure 3(a) A coronar magnetic resonance imaging (T2-weighted) showing the tumor infiltration of the knee. (b) An axial T2-weighted sequence showing the tumor extension of the whole quadriceps muscles.
Figure 4Photographs 6 months postoperatively showing an unrestricted dorsalextension and plantarflexion of the ankle.
Figure 5(a) An anterior-posterior radiograph showing the ankle without relevant signs of arthrosis 1 years postoperatively. Osteopenia due to the limited exposure of the leg. (b) An anterior-posterior and lateral radiograph showing the ankle 15 years postoperatively without relevant signs of arthrosis.