| Literature DB >> 32185197 |
Runguang Li1,2,3, Guozheng Zhu4,5, Chaojie Chen6, Yirong Chen4,5, Gaohong Ren4,5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the surgical efficacy of bone transport (Ilizarov technique) plus "shortening-lengthening," "flap surgery," and "open bone transport" as individualized treatments for traumatic composite tibial bone and soft tissue defects.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32185197 PMCID: PMC7060447 DOI: 10.1155/2020/2716547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Incidence and management of postoperative complications.
| Complication | Number of cases ( | Management | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flap crisis | 3 | Vascular exploration | Slight flap necrosis was healed after debridement, grafting, or dressing change |
| Recurrence of deep infection | 2 | Removal of infected bone | Improvement |
| Nonunion of bone defect | 14 | Autologous or allogeneic bone transplantation | Healing |
| Refracture | 4 | External fixation for another 6 months | Bone union |
| Severe nail tunnel reaction or mechanical axis deviation | 19 | Nail/needle replacement, mechanical axis adjustment | Improvement |
| Joint stiffness (knee joint stiffness, foot drop, claw toe) | 13 | Decompression surgery, foot ring | Improvement |
| Limb shortening (>3 cm) | 2 | None | None |
| Soft tissue folding affecting bone transport contact | 5 | Soft tissue repair | Improvement |
| Flap swelling | 8 | Flap repair | Improvement |
| Poor wound healing | 10 | Dressing change | Improvement |
Note: the number of complications refers to the number of patients presenting with complications. One patient may successively or simultaneously have different complications, and one or more may be simultaneously treated during the surgical treatment. The functional score is obtained after these complications are treated.
ASAMI functional score of the lower extremity revealed excellent/good bone results in 76.47% of cases.
| Functional | Description | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Excellent | Active, no limp, minimum stiffness (loss of <15 knee extensions/<15 dorsiflexions of ankle), no reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD), insignificant pain | 34 |
| Good | Active, with one or two of the following: limp, stiffness, RSD, significant pain | 18 |
| Fair | Active, with three or all of the following: limp, stiffness, RSDa, significant pain | 10 |
| Poor | Inactive (unemployment or inability to perform daily activities because of injury) | 6 |
| Failures | Amputation | 0 |
Figure 1(a-b) Appearance of the affected limb when transferred to our department; (c) anteroposterior and lateral X-ray of tibia and fibula; (d-e) after debridement, limb shortening was conducted, and a thoracoumbilical flap transplanted to repair the wound surface. (f-g) 1 month after surgery, the flap survived well. The external fixator was replaced and osteotomy conducted for bone transport. Both the postoperative appearance and the X-ray result are shown; (h-i) 11 months after bone transport, the limb could bear weight, the X-ray demonstrated that the fracture was healed, and the external fixator was removed. (j-k) Both the X-ray and the appearance of the affected limb. The postoperative follow-up period was 18 months.
Figure 2(a–f) Both the appearance and the X-rays of the injured lower leg; (g-h) free anterolateral thigh flap for repairing the wounds after multiple debridements and wound purification; (i-j) external fixator was adjusted, the lesions were debrided again, and osteotomy and bone transport were performed at the proximal tibia intraoperatively; (k-l) the X-rays of tibia and fibula during bone transport at approximately 2 months and 9 months. (m-n) Foot ring was added to correct foot drop in later stage of bone transport. 20 months after bone transport, the external fixator was scheduled to be removed. (o–r) Both the appearance and the X-ray at 36-month follow-up after the bone transport.
Figure 3(a) The appearance of the affected limb at transfer to our department; (b) X-ray of tibia and fibula; (c) after debridement and replacement of the external fixator, the bone defect site was filled with a calcium sulfate spacer loaded with vancomycin, exposing the wound surface; (d) postoperative X-ray; (e–j) the appearance of the affected limb after operation. The wound surface gradually decreased and healed throughout the bone transport process; (k) postoperative X-ray at 11 months showed that the fracture was well healed and the external fixator was removed; (l-m) both the X-ray and the appearance at 24 months after the operation.