| Literature DB >> 19057984 |
Konstantinos N Malizos1, Nikolaos E Gougoulias, Zoe H Dailiana, Nikolaos Rigopoulos, Theofanis Moraitis.
Abstract
The Ilizarov technique is an alternative for the treatment of complex foot deformities in children. The authors retrospectively reviewed children with relapsed clubfoot deformity, treated with soft tissue procedures and additional correction with an Ilizarov frame. Twelve consecutive patients (13 feet) with relapsed clubfoot deformity after previous surgical correction were reviewed. Treatment included open releases. An Ilizarov frame was applied as an adjunct in seven patients (mean age of 7.8 years) with severe deformity where complete intraoperative correction was not achieved. Clinical and radiographic assessment was undertaken. The mean Laaveg-Ponseti score, for the 7 feet treated with the Ilizarov frame, was 85.1 after minimum 4 years follow-up. One recurrence of forefoot deformity required metatarsal osteotomies. Postoperative radiographic measurements revealed values that can be considered as normal. Complications included pin tract infections (12% of inserted wires). Flat-topped talus was observed in 3 feet. Deformity correction was possible when soft tissue procedures were combined with the use of Ilizarov technique, in order to support and gradually improve surgical correction.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19057984 PMCID: PMC2599798 DOI: 10.1007/s11751-008-0049-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Strategies Trauma Limb Reconstr ISSN: 1828-8928
Fig. 1The Ilizarov frame (Smith and Nephew, Memphis, Tennessee) consisted of two tibial rings, a half ring placed posterior and fixed on to the calcaneus and a midfoot transfixion half-ring. Hinges placed appropriately allowed gradual correction
Summary of patients data, surgical procedures and outcomes
| Gender | Cause | Age 1st procedure (months)a | Age 2nd procedure (years)b | Ilizarov frame | Time in frame (weeks) | Follow-up (months) | Laaveg–Ponseti score | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | CTEV | 4 | 4 | No | NA | 60 | 96 |
| 2 | M | EM | 12 | 12 | Yes | 9 | 52 | 77 |
| 3 | F | CTEV | 12 | 17 | Yes | 12 | 54 | 82 |
| 4 | F | CTEV | 6 | 1.5 | No | NA | 48 | 81 |
| 5 | M | CTEV | 6 | 5 | Yes | 10 | 48 | 97 |
| 6 | M | CTEV | 5 | 2.5 | No | NA | 64 | 96 |
| 7 | M | CTEV | 7 | 3 | Yes | 8 | 84 | 86 |
| 8 | M | CTEV | 14 | 3 | Yes | 13 | 64 | 83 |
| 9 | M | CTEV | 3 | 10 | Yes | 12 | 64 | 98 |
| 10 | F | MMC | 24 | 4.5 | Yes | 12 | 64 | 73 |
| 11 R | M | CTEV | 12 | 2.5 | No | NA | 30 | 88 |
| 11 L | M | CTEV | 12 | 2.5 | No | NA | 30 | 84 |
| 12 | M | PAR EQCV | 8 | 7 | No | NA | 24 | 86 |
R right, L left, M male, F female, MMC meningomyelocele, EM encephalomyelitis, PAR paralytic, EQCV equinocavovarus, NA non-applicable
aAge 1: Age at initiation of surgical treatment (months)
bAge 2: Age at treatment of relapsed deformity (years)
Clinical outcome according to the Laaveg-Ponseti scale
| Score | Total (13) | Ilizarov (7) | K-wires (6) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent (90–100 points) | 4 | 2 | 2 |
| Good (80–89 points) | 7 | 3 | 4 |
| Fair (70–79 points) | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Poor (<70 points) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Fig. 2Pre- and postoperative radiographic angle measurements for each patient
Radiographic parameters (mean values) at final follow-up, in 7 stiff feet requiring an Ilizarov frame
| Talo-calcaneal (AP) | Talus- 1st MT (AP) | Calcaneus- 5th MT (AP) | Talo-calcaneal (lat) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preop. | ||||
| Mean | 17.9 | 24.9 | 25.9 | 24.1 |
| Stdev | 5.1 | 13.0 | 12.8 | 7.9 |
| Postop. | ||||
| Mean | 32.0 | 9.0 | 7.6 | 36.7 |
| Stdev | 5.4 | 2.8 | 3.8 | 5.8 |
| <0.001 | 0.02 | 0.01 | 0.01 | |
MT metatarsal, AP anteroposterior, lat lateral, stdev standard deviation
Significant differences were obtained between pre- and postoperative values
Fig. 3Relapsed stiff clubfoot deformity (a) required soft tissue releases (b) combined with application of an Ilizarov frame (c) at the age of 3 years. Forefoot deformity recurrence (d) at the age of 6 years required proximal metatarsal osteotomies. Good alignment is maintained at the age of 10 years (e–i). Flat topped talus on the lateral radiograph (f)
Fig. 4Asymptomatic, well-aligned foot in a teenager after soft tissue release and Ilizarov frame application. The left foot (arrows), initially surgically treated at the age of 3, underwent surgical treatment for relapse of his clubfoot at the age of 10 years (open arthrolysis, Achilles, FHL, FDL tendon lengthening and plantar aponeurosis release accompanied by an Ilizarov frame), achieving a Laaveg–Ponseti score of 98 after 4.5 years of follow-up
Literature overview: studies reporting on application of the Ilizarov technique for clubfoot correction
| Number of feet | Age (years) | Soft tissue procedures | Osseous procedures | Folow-up (mean) | Good/excellent results | Recurrence | Complications | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Franke et al. [ | 13 (5 relapsed CTEV, 2 posttraumatic) | 8–15 | Arthrolysis and toe flexors lengthening (5) | No | 5 years | 13/13 | 2/13 | Pin tract infections | |
| Grant et al. [ | 3 (2 relapsed CTEV) | 4–5 | No | No | 3/3 | No | Pin tract infections | ||
| Wallander et al. [ | 10 (relapsed CTEV) | 6–15 | No | No | 40 months | 3/10 (but 6/7 of pts satisfied) | Mild Equinus 5/10 | Pin tract infections, Distal tibia epiphysiolysis, Claw toes, Talus subluxation | Poor ‘scoring’ but pts satisfied |
| Bradish and Noor [ | 17 (relapsed CTEV) | 6–11 | No | No | 2.7 years | 13/17 | 4/17 | Pin tract infections, Distal tibia epiphysiolysis, Claw toes | Split Tibialis anterior transfer in 5 feet after frame removal |
| Hosny [ | 23 (11 relapsed CTEV) | 2.5–49 | No | No | 18 months | 20/23 | 3/23 | Pin tract infections | Short follow-up “Bloodless” technique |
| Barbary et al. [ | 66 (41 CTEV, 33 relapsed, 23 arthrogrypotic) | 4–14 | No | No | 40 months | All | Forefoot 8/66 | Distal tibia epiphysiolysis, Claw toes | Plantigrade feet, no specific outcome measures |
| Ferreira et al. [ | 38 (neglected CTEV, 13 skeletally immature) | 5–39 | Achilles tenotomy, Plantar fasciotomy | No | 58 months | 30/38 | 19/38 | Tibia fracture, 1st MTPJ dislocation arterial damage, Claw toes | Most patients skeletally mature Ankylosis 74% |
| Ferreira et al. [ | 35 (relapsed CTEV, 15 skeletally immature) | 4–31 | Achilles tenotomy, Plantar fasciotomy | Midfoot osteotomy 11/35 | 56 months | 27/35 | 11/35 | 1st MTPJ dislocation, Claw toes, Distal tibia epiphysiolysis | Most patients skeletally mature Frequent need for arthrodesis |
| Nakase et al. [ | 6 (3 previous surgery) | 4.5–10.5 | Subtalar release, & TP lengthening (6), ACHTL (3) | No | 5.1 years | 6/6 | – | – | |
| Prem et al. [ | 19 | 2–8 | No | No | >5 years | 14/19 | 1/19 | Pin tract infections | Stiff feet |
| Utukuri et al. [ | 26 feet (20 recurrent CTEV) | 3–15 | Plantar fasciotomy, ±ACHTL±PMR | ‘V’ type osteotomy (9 feet) if > 6 yrs | 47 months | 14/23 pts satisfied | 12/26 feet | Pin tract infections, Talus subluxation, Claw toes | Patient-based outcome measures |
| Freedman et al. [ | 21 (13 idiopathic, 8 arthrogrypotic) | 2.7–9.8 | PMR, ACHTL, LR (12 feet) | No | 6.6 years | 3/21 | 11/21 | Pin tract infections, skin pressure by wires | Very short duration of frame in situ (27 days) |
| Current study | 7 feet (5 CTEV, 2 neurologic) | 3–17 | PMR, Arthrolysis & Tendon lengthening (2) | No | 56 months | 5/7 | 1/7 | Pin tract infections | Fair result in neurologic disorers |
CTEV congenital talipes equinovarus, PMR posteromedial release, ACHTL Achilles tendon lengthening, LR lateral release