• J Bone Joint Surg Am · May 2003

    Multicenter Study

    Gradual femoral lengthening with the Albizzia intramedullary nail.

    • Jean-Marc Guichet, Barbara Deromedis, Leo T Donnan, Giovanni Peretti, Pierre Lascombes, and Flavio Bado.
    • Children's Hospital, Nancy, France. j.guichet@mageos.com
    • J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2003 May 1; 85 (5): 838-48.

    BackgroundGradual limb lengthening with currently used external fixation techniques can result in less than optimal outcomes, with complications including infection, stiffness of adjacent joints, and secondary axial deviation of the extremity. We describe a totally implantable lengthening device designed to provide results similar to those achieved with external fixation devices, with fewer complications and improved outcomes.MethodsBetween 1993 and 1997, thirty-one patients (forty-one femora) underwent limb lengthening with a new internal fixation technique (Albizzia) to treat a congenitally short extremity (thirteen patients), post-traumatic limb-length inequality (eleven patients), or developmental problems (seven patients). Twenty-one patients (twenty-one femora) underwent unilateral surgery to equalize the limb lengths, and ten (twenty femora) underwent bilateral surgery to correct short stature. The mean age was twenty years and one month (range, twelve to thirty-nine years). After intramedullary corticotomy of the diaphysis of the femur, an intramedullary nail was inserted in an antegrade fashion. Fifteen alternating internal and external rotation maneuvers of the lower limb elongated the nail by 1 mm. The outcomes were assessed clinically and radiographically at a mean of fifty months postoperatively.ResultsThe gain in femoral length averaged 3.4 cm (range, 2 to 5.5 cm) after the unilateral lengthening procedures and 6.3 cm (range, 4.6 to 8.4 cm) after the bilateral procedures. Patients underwent an average of three operations on each limb; these procedures included, in addition to the nail insertion and nail removal, ratcheting under general anesthesia in thirteen limbs and eleven procedures to treat complications in nine patients. At the time of follow-up, no patient had axial deviation of the limb secondary to lengthening.ConclusionsFemoral lengthening with use of the minimally invasive Albizzia technique provides a reasonable alternative to external fixation that is well tolerated by patients and results in excellent function with little or no distortion of body image.

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