The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume
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The cases of twenty-six patients who had a reconstructive surgical procedure for treatment of a malunion of a displaced fracture of the fibula were evaluated. In these patients, who had pain, swelling of the ankle, and stiffness at an average of six years after the injury, the malunions were classified radiographically as either occult (eighteen patients) or overt (eight patients). ⋯ All of the patients were treated by osteotomy of the lateral malleolus to correct the external rotation and shortening, to reduce the lateral subluxation of the anterior aspect of the tibiofibular joint, and to restore the stability of the talus. At an average follow-up of seven years (range, six months to eleven years), twenty of the twenty-six patients were able to resume the preinjury level of activity; three had improvement in the ability to walk and in the level of functional activity, although they still had intermittent pain; and three had not benefited from the procedure.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Apr 1989
Management of neuromuscular spinal deformities with Luque segmental instrumentation.
Forty-six patients who had a neuromuscular spinal deformity were treated with arthrodesis and Luque segmental spinal instrumentation and were followed for an average of three years. Twenty-two patients had cerebral palsy and twenty-four had another neuromuscular disease. In thirty-nine patients, the arthrodesis was extended to the sacrum. ⋯ Pseudarthrosis occurred in three patients (6.5 per cent). There were no major neurological deficits related to the correction or to the use of sublaminar wires. Three patients died, one in the immediate postoperative period and the other two at eighteen months and four years after the original procedure, due to causes unrelated to the operation.