| Literature DB >> 26362170 |
Benjamin Joseph1,2, Hugh Watts3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To date, polio has not been eradicated and there appears to be a resurgence of the disease. Hence, there is a need to revive decision-making skills to treat the effects of polio.Entities:
Keywords: Bracing; Paralytic deformity; Poliomyelitis; Resurgence; Surgical decision-making
Year: 2015 PMID: 26362170 PMCID: PMC4619376 DOI: 10.1007/s11832-015-0678-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Orthop ISSN: 1863-2521 Impact factor: 1.548
Consequences of muscle paralysis and the treatment options
| Consequence of muscle paralysis | Options for intervention |
|---|---|
| Motor weakness | Tendon transfer if muscle of adequate power (Grade V on the MRC scale) is available |
| Bracing if muscle of adequate power is not available | |
| Muscle imbalance | Tendon transfer from stronger side of the joint to the weaker side of the joint if muscle of adequate power is available |
| Weaken muscles on stronger side of the joint if muscle of adequate power is not available for transfer | |
| Instability of joint | Tendon transfer if: |
| Osteotomy to alter the biomechanics and restore stability (e.g., shifting the axis of movement of the joint) | |
| Bracing if tendon transfer or osteotomy is not feasible | |
| Arthrodesis (appropriate only for spine, shoulder, wrist and foot) | |
| Deformity | Soft tissue contracture release (release of tendons, fascia, joint capsule) |
| Osteotomy for residual deformity after soft tissue release | |
| Ignore if deformity contributes to stability (e.g., mild genu recurvatum or mild equinus in child with quadriceps paralysis) | |
| Shortening of lower limb | Lengthening of short lower limb |
| Growth arrest of long lower limb | |
| Compensate with shoe lift (especially if orthosis is required for shorter limb) | |
| Ignore shortening in the upper limb and if <2 cm in the lower limb |
Fig. 1Pelvic obliquity due to an abduction contracture of one hip can result in dislocation of the opposite hip
Patterns, consequences and treatment options of hip problems in polio
| Problems | Common patterns | Consequences | Treatment options |
|---|---|---|---|
| Motor weakness | Hip abductor weakness | Trendelenburg gait | Iliopsoas transfer |
| Hip extensor weakness | Gluteus maximus lurch | Erector spinae transfer | |
| Muscle imbalance | Hip flexor stronger than hip extensor | Flexion deformity of the hip resulting in knee flexion with instability in stance if the quadriceps is also weak | Hip flexor release |
| Hip flexor and adductor stronger than hip abductor and extensor | Flexion/addiction deformity and tendency for paralytic subluxation and dislocation of the hip | Hip flexor/adductor release | |
| Deformity | Flexion, abduction, external rotation | Pelvic obliquity | Soft tissue release (sartorius, tensor fascia lata, rectus femoris, anterior fibres of gluteus medius and minimus, iliopsoas, anterior capsule of hip) |
| Instability | Trendelenburg gait without hip subluxation due to abductor weakness | Instability during stance phase of gait | Iliopsoas or external oblique tendon transfer |
| Paralytic subluxation or dislocation due to muscle imbalance | Joint instability | Restore muscle balance with iliopsoas tendon transfer and correct coxa valga, femoral anteversion and acetabular dysplasia |
Fig. 2Hand-to-thigh gait adopted by a boy who has paralysis of his left quadriceps femoris muscle
Fig. 3A young boy (a) and an adolescent (b) with severe genu recurvatum
Fig. 4Skeletal traction for severe fixed flexion deformity of the knee should include anterior traction on the proximal tibia to prevent posterior subluxation of the knee along with longitudinal traction to correct the flexion deformity
Fig. 5An equino-cavo-varus deformity in an adolescent with polio. The equinus (a), cavus (b) and the hind foot varus (c) components of the deformity are clearly seen
Fig. 6The location of tendons in relation to axes of the ankle joint (AA′) and the subtalar joint (STST′) are shown. All tendons located anterior to the axis of the ankle are ankle dorsiflexors (top-middle) while all tendons located posterior to the axis of the ankle are plantarflexors (top-right). All tendons located medial to the subtalar axis are invertors (bottom-middle) while all tendons located lateral to the subtalar axis are evertors (bottom-right). The greater the perpendicular distance of these tendons from the respective axis, the greater is their force moment
Fig. 7Loss of muscle balance across the joint axis can result in a deformity. Restoration of muscle balance by an appropriate tendon transfer can correct the deformity
Fig. 8Manual muscle testing of power of ankle dorsiflexors (a) and the invertors (b)
Fig. 9Wedges resected from the talus and calcaneum during triple fusion for equino-cavus (above) and calcaneus (below)
Fig. 10Varus deformity of the ankle, acquired ball-and-socket ankle, degenerative arthritis and varus instability developed 25 years after a triple fusion was performed to correct a varus deformity at the subtalar level in an adolescent. The underlying muscle imbalance was not corrected at the time of surgery
Fig. 11Active abduction of the shoulder (a) which enables a girl to tie her hair (b) is possible after arthrodesis of a flail shoulder (c)
Fig. 12Poor opposition of thumb in a child with paralysis of the opponens pollicis following polio (left) and pulp-to-pulp opposition restored after opponensplasty with flexor digitorum superficialis transfer (right)
Factors that determine the type of joint to incorporate in traditional orthosis
| Age of the child | Side requiring bracing | Quadriceps power | Type of knee joint to be used in orthosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| <5 years | Unilateral or bilateral brace | Grade III power or less | No knee joint |
| >5 years | Unilateral or bilateral | Grade III power | Posterior offset knee joint |
| >5 years | Unilateral | Less than Grade III power | Drop lock knee joint |
| >5 years | Bilateral | Less than Grade III power | Swiss knee joints (syn. bail lock) |
Indications for bracing of the lower limb in children in the phase of residual paralysis following polio
| Indications | Aim | Orthosis |
|---|---|---|
| Quadriceps power Grade IV or V | Prevent foot drop during swing phase | Thermoplastic ankle foot orthosis with trim lines posterior to malleoli—leaf spring orthosis (to be worn until tendon transfer is performed) |
| Quadriceps power Grade IV or V | Prevent rigid equinovarus or equinovalgus from developing before the tendon transfer is performed | Thermoplastic ankle foot orthosis with trim lines anterior to malleoli (to be worn until tendon transfer is performed and 6 months following tendon transfer) |
| Quadriceps power Grade IV or V | To protect the transferred tendon from stretching and becoming ineffective | Thermoplastic ankle foot orthosis with trim lines anterior to malleoli (to be worn for 6 months following tendon transfer and then discarded) |
| Quadriceps power Grade III or less | Prevent the knee from buckling during single leg stance | Thermoplastic floor reaction orthosisa (molded with ankle in 10° of plantarflexion) |
| Quadriceps power Grade III or less | Prevent the knee from buckling during single leg stance | Lehneis modification of the floor reaction orthosis (high popliteal trim line and suprapatellar extension) |
| Quadriceps power Grade III or less of both knees | Prevent the knees from buckling during single leg stance | Thermoplastic floor reaction orthosis on stronger limb and knee−ankle–foot orthosis with drop-lock knee joint on weaker limb |
| Power of hip muscles less than Grade III | Prevent hip instability | Knee−ankle–foot orthosis with thermoplastic ischial bearing quadrilateral socket, double irons and drop-lock knee joint |
| Power of muscles of both hips less than Grade III | Prevent instability of both hips | Bilateral knee-ankle–foot orthosis with thermoplastic ischial bearing quadrilateral socket, double irons and Swiss knee joints (bail locks) |
aFloor reaction orthosis (FRO) is also called ground reaction orthosis (GRO)
Examples of simple options to treat flexion deformity of the knee in polio
| Deformity | Recommended treatment | Advantages |
|---|---|---|
| Mild flexion deformity of the knee | Wedging of plaster casts | Low cost option as it avoids surgery and anaesthesia |
| Moderate flexion deformity of the knee | Spike osteotomy [ | Low cost option as it avoids the need for an implant for internal fixation |
| Corrective osteotomy, crossed K-wire fixation and above-knee cast (avoid blade-plate and locked plate) | Low cost option as C-arm not required and implant is very cheap | |
| Severe flexion deformity of the knee | Soft tissue release followed by gradual correction of the deformity by skeletal traction | Technically simple and low cost option as the need for a complex external fixator for gradual correction of the deformity is avoided |