| Literature DB >> 35334565 |
Ishan Patel1, Jacob Young2, Austen Washington1, Rahul Vaidya1.
Abstract
Background andEntities:
Keywords: approach; malunion; outcomes; pilon; plateau; shaft; tibia; tibial
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35334565 PMCID: PMC8956117 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58030389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Figure 1Flowchart displaying methodology for literature review [3].
Figure 2Part (A,D) show a proximal tibia extra-articular malunion in 6 degrees of varus and 24 degrees in procurvatum. Part (B,E) demonstrate patient after proximal tibial subtubercular osteotomy and dual plating, with the alignment restored. Part (C) depicts the contralateral limb.
Figure 3Case of a 54-year-old female with intra-articular malunion of the proximal tibia with 5 mm of lateral depression and 13 degrees of varus deformity (first row of images). CT scan is shown in the second row of images. Patient was treated with a lateral parapatellar approach with a lateral tibial tubercle osteotomy and a trap door osteotomy. The depressed fragments were elevated followed by an opening-wedge tibial osteotomy. Medial and lateral plates were applied to hold the reduction (third row of images).
Studies involving tibial plateau malunions, sorted by lateral, posterolateral, medial, or bicondylar involvement.
| Study | Patients (#) | Surgical Treatment | Outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lateral | Marti et al. | 21 | Oblique osteotomy w/open-wedge osteotomy for lower-limb alignment correction | Increased range of motion (mean 12°); correction of tibial plateau depression |
| Kerkhoffs et al. | 23 | Combined intra-articular and varus opening-wedge osteotomy | Varus deformities and depression were corrected | |
| Mastrokalos et al. | 1 | Reconstruction w/open-book osteotomy | Pain-free; angular deformity corrected; restoration of normal joint congruency, and alignment of axis of knee; function was at preinjury level at latest follow up | |
| Kfuri and Schatzker | 1 | Intra-articular osteotomy | Pain resolved, range of motion restored, alignment restored | |
| Furnstahl et al. | 1 | Computer-assisted corrective osteotomy w/patient-specific guides | Pain improved in all patients | |
| Van Nielen DL et al. | 1 | Revision surgery of tibial plateau involving intra/extra articular osteotomy (1); anterolateral osteotomy (1) | Pain was alleviated, and full range of motion was achieved | |
| Furnstahl et al. | 1 | Computer-assisted corrective osteotomy w/patient-specific guides | Pain improved in all patients | |
| Yang Di et al. | 7 | 3D-printing-assisted corrective osteotomy | Statistically significant improvements in anatomy and function achieved | |
| Medial | Pagkalos et al. | 1 | Opening-wedge, hemi-tibial plateau intra-articular corrective osteotomy | Symmetrical bony anatomy achieved |
| Furnstahl et al. | 1 | Computer-assisted corrective osteotomy w/patient-specific guides | Pain improved in all patients | |
| Saengnipanthkul | 1 | Unicondyle high-tibial osteotomy | Restored medial tibial plateau and medial posterior slope | |
| Kfuri and Schatzker | 1 | Medial wedge-opening osteotomy | Bone healing, full range of motion, and return to normal activity | |
| Hosokawa et al. | 1 | Corrective osteotomy | Pain resolved; ROM preserved | |
| Posteromedial | Kfuri and Schatzker | 1 | Corrective osteotomy | ROM restored, return to work activities |
| Bicondylar | Wu CC | 14 | Transverse subtubercle osteotomy with lateral open-wedge medial blade plate | Varus deformities were corrected |
| Van Nielen DL et al. | 1 | Revision surgery of tibial plateau involving intra/extra articular osteotomy (1); anterolateral osteotomy (1) | Pain was alleviated, and full range of motion was achieved | |
| Plateau Widening | Kfuri and Schatzker | 1 | Intra-articular closing-wedge osteotomy | Normal alignment, full ROM achieved, pain-free |
Studies involving tibial plateau malunions, sorted by lateral, posterolateral, medial, or bicondylar involvement. Deformities before and after surgical intervention are displayed.
| Study | Patients (#) | Malunion Deformity | Post-Surgical Alignment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lateral | Marti et al. | 21 | Valgus deformity < 20 degrees; lateral plateau depression < 20 mm | Mean improvement of tibiofibular angle (8.6 degrees); mean improvement in lateral plateau depression (6 mm) |
| Kerkhoffs et al. | 23 | Mean valgus deformity 13 degrees; mean plateau depression 7.7 mm | Mean tibiofibular angle 4.4 degrees; mean lateral plateau depression 1.7 mm | |
| Mastrokalos et al. | 1 | 20-degree valgus deformity with >15 mm lateral plateau depression | No angular deformity or plateau depression | |
| Kfuri and Schatzker | 1 | 5 mm | Normal alignment | |
| Furnstahl et al. | 1 | Plateau depression 3.6 mm; coronal deformity 10; sagittal deformity 7.0 degrees; torsional deformity 12.8 | Plateau depression 1.1 mm; coronal deformity improved to 0.5 degrees; | |
| Van Nielen DL et al. | 1 | Valgus deformity 8 degrees with posterolateral fragment depression 3 mm | Normal alignment | |
| Furnstahl et al. | 1 | Plateau depression 1.3 mm; coronal deformity 2.4 degrees; sagittal deformity 14.9 degrees; torsional deformity 1.8 degrees | Plateau depression improved to 0.2 mm; coronal deformity worsened to 3.5 degrees; sagittal deformity improved to 4.1 degrees; torsional deformity improved to 0.3 degrees | |
| Yang Di et al. | 7 | Mean plateau depression of 9.4 mm | Plateau depression <1 mm for all patients | |
| Medial | Pagkalos et al. | 1 | Plateau depression 15 mm 9 degrees coronal deformity | Normal alignment |
| Furnstahl et al. | 1 | Plateau depression 6.5 mm; coronal deformity 7.8 degrees; sagittal deformity 2.6 degrees; torsional deformity 2.5 degrees | Plateau depression improved to 1.0 mm; coronal deformity improved to 1.5 degrees; sagittal deformity improved to 0.4 degrees; torsional deformity improved to 0.8 degrees. | |
| Saengnipanthkul | 1 | 15-degree varus deformity; posteromedial slope 29 degrees; | Restored medial tibial plateau and medial posterior slope | |
| Kfuri and Schatzker | 1 | 25-degree varus 5 mm depression | Normal alignment | |
| Hosokawa et al. | 1 | 9-degree varus deformity; 27 degree flexion deformity | Total knee arthroplasty | |
| Posteromedial | Kfuri and Schatzker | 1 | 27-degree varus deformity 5 mm depressed | Normal alignment |
| Bicondylar | Wu CC | 14 | Varus knees with proximal medial tibial angle avg of 72 degrees | Proximal medial tibial angle improved to avg 88 degrees |
| Van Nielson DL et al. | Not stated | Normal alignment | ||
| Plateau Widening | Kfuri and Schatzker | 1 | Not stated | Normal alignment |
Figure 4This is a case of a 53-year-old patient with post-traumatic tibial deformity complaining of knee and ankle pain. The deformity was assessed on long-leg standing alignment views, compared to the other tibia in AP and lateral views. CT scan revealed very little rotational deformity. An osteotomy was planned at the center of rotation and angulation (CORA), which was close to the same location on both AP and lateral. This is a single-plane deformity, which has been measured on both the AP and lateral images. The right two images show the patient post-transverse opening-wedge osteotomy fixed with an intramedullary nail and a plate. Healed in good alignment.
Studies involving tibial shaft malunions.
| Study | Patients (#) | Surgical Treatment | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Graehl et al. | 8 | Supramalleolar dome osteotomy or closed-wedge osteotomy | Improvement in pain in six patients; decrease in limping for 7 patients; improvement in sagittal plane deformity in all patients; coronal plane improvement in 1 of 3 patients with significant presurgical deformity |
| Sanders et al. | 12 | Oblique osteotomy | Correction of sagittal deformity to within 2° of normal; correction in coronal plane within 1° of normal; avg 1.3 cm of lengthening obtained; full range of motion (10); full-weight bearing; and return to previous employment (10); two patients failed initial revision |
| Kempf et al. | 7 | Reamed intramedullary nail | Good correction and all healed |
| Mayo and Benirschke | 23 | Reamed intramedullary nail | All healed, 1 infection with acceptable alignment |
| Sangeorzan et al. | 4 | Single-cut oblique osteotomy | All angular deformities were corrected. One patient developed deep infection, was successfully treated, and had a positive outcome |
| Wu CC et al. | 37 | Reamed intramedullary nailing | All patients’ deformities reached <10° angulation and/or rotation and <2 cm shortening; limping gait was corrected |
| Johnson | 7 | Multiplane corrective osteotomy | Lower-leg deformity and angulation improved in all patients; 2 patients had improved back pain; ipsilateral knee pain relieved (4); ipsilateral ankle discomfort resolved (2); improved back pain (2); gait improved in all patients; fibula nonunion (4) |
| LaFrance et al. | 1 | 2 stage: corrective fibula osteotomy followed by revision ACL reconstruction | Instability resolved |
| Feldman et al. | 11 | Taylor Spatial Frame | Mean alignment: coronal angulation 1.4°, sagittal plane 0.9°, shortening 4.4 mm, rotation 0.6° |
| Lahav and DiMaio | 1 | Opening-wedge osteotomy and total knee arthroplasty | Excellent range of motion and a stable knee to varus and valgus stress. Radiographs at two years illustrated a well-seated TKA and correction of tibial alignment |
| Paley et al. | 17 | Ilizarov | Angular > 5° rotation > 15° lld > 1.5 mean 4.5 cm |
| All corrected within 1.5 cm lld angular deformity < 5° and rotation < 10° |
Studies involving tibial shaft malunions. Deformities before and after surgical intervention are displayed.
| Study | Patients (#) | Malunion Deformity | Post-Surgical Alignment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Graehl et al. | 8 | Varus deformity 15 degrees; one patient had an anterior sagittal plane deformity of 14 degrees; two had posterior deformities of 30 degrees and 45 degrees | Average coronal plane alignment 0 degrees; sagittal angulation was 8 degrees of recurvatum on average; only 1 of 3 patients with sagittal deformity were in neutral alignment |
| Mast et al. | 17 | >8-degree coronal, 5–40-degree sagittal, 10 IR-15 ER, leg length discrepancy 1–2 cm | Healed corrected within 5 degrees |
| Sanders et al. | 12 | Mean sagittal plane deformity 13 degrees; mean coronal plane deformity 23 degrees of procurator; average shortening 2.2 cm | Correction of sagittal deformity to within 2° of normal; correction in coronal plane within 1° of normal; avg 1.3 cm of lengthening obtained |
| Sangeorzan et al. | 4 | Varus deformity 15 degrees on average; 9.75 degrees of extension on average; 1 cm of shortening | All corrected to within acceptable limits |
| Wu CC et al. | 37 | Angular or rotational deformity, but no shortening >2 cm | All patients’ deformities reached <10° angulation and/or rotation and <2 cm shortening |
| Johnson | 7 | Varus in six patients averaged 16.6 degrees; shortening averaged 1.29 cm in six patients; posterior bowing averaged 8.2 degrees in five patients. | Lower-leg deformity and angulation improved in all patients |
| LaFrance et al. | 1 | 15-degree apex anterior; valgus 10 alignment | Normal alignment |
| Feldman et al. | 11 | Mean alignment: coronal angulation 11.7°, sagittal plane 10.3°, shortening 6.8 mm, rotation 0.6° | Mean alignment: coronal angulation 1.4°, sagittal plane 0.9°, shortening 4.4 mm, rotation 0.6° |
| Lahav and Dimaio | 1 | Varus malalignment at the knee was 12 degrees; 20-degree varus malunion of the tibia | Normal alignment |
| Paley et al. | 17 | Angular rotation >5° (avg rotation >15°) leg length discrepancy >1.5 (mean 4.5 cm) | All corrected within 1.5 cm leg length discrepancy, angular deformity < 5°, and rotation < 10° |
Figure 5A case of a severe distal tibia deformity with obvious soft tissue damage on the lateral border of the deformity. Conventional X-rays were unable to fully assess or define the deformity that can be seen on a 3D reconstruction CT scan (B). Image (A) depicts a gross image. An osteotomy and fixation with a Tayler Spatial Frame (C) were used with a residual calculation to slowly correct the deformity. Slow correction would help protect the soft tissue envelope on the lateral border and stretch the medial soft tissues. Correction has resulted in a plantigrade foot with motion of the ankle and a healed tibia (D).
Studies involving distal tibial malunions.
| Study | Patients (#) | Surgical Treatment | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kane and Raikin | 16 | Single-stage corrective osteotomy w/tibiotalocalcaneal nailing | VAS * pain scores improved from 8.3 to 2.8; |
| Schoenleber and Hutson Jr. | 5 | Deformities corrected w/gradual opening wedge osteotomy w/lengthening when indicated | Lower-leg deformity equalized |
| Nehme et al. | 1 | Arthroscopy-assisted mobilization w/percutaneous fixation | Patient regained full physical activities; American foot and ankle score of 100 |
* Visual Analog Scare; ** American Orthopedic Foot and Ankle Society Score.
Studies involving distal tibial malunions. Deformities before and after surgical intervention are displayed.
| Study | Patients (#) | Malunion Deformity | Post-Surgical Alignment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kane and Raikin | 16 | Varus and recurvatum combination was the most commonly seen deformity; average sagittal plane malalignment was 26°, and the average coronal plane malalignment was 21° | All deformities corrected to neutral alignment |
| Schoenleber and Hutson Jr. | 5 | Varus deformities (8–19 degrees);valgus deformities (16 degrees); apex anterior deformities (2–21 degrees); apex posterior deformity (range, 9–20 degrees). | Lower-leg deformity neutralized to less than 5 degrees angulation in all TSF patients and to less than 5 degrees in one plane and less than 10 degrees in the second with the Ilizarov |
| Nehme et al. | 1 | Malunited medial malleolus | Within normal limits |
| Rammelt and Zwipp | 14 | Malunited pilon fractures treated with intra-articular osteotomy presented at 3 mo | 5-year follow up |