Clinical orthopaedics and related research
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Eleven patients with fibular malunion after ankle fracture healed with stiff, painful joints and radiographic evidence of fibular malunion, diastasis of the ankle mortice, and talar tilt. Reconstruction was performed by mobilizing the fibula (by osteotomy or through the old fracture site), lengthening the fibula, and restoring the ankle mortice anatomically. The operation was done three months to three years after the initial fracture in patients ranging in age from 26 to 52 years. ⋯ Good functional results were maintained at long-term follow-up examination. The factors that determined the success of the revision were the duration of the malunion, the quality of the reduction achieved, and the condition of the articular cartilage at the time of revision. Late correction of the malunited fibula with diastasis of the ankle mortice is an effective means of salvaging function in a joint otherwise destined to be stiff and painful.
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One hundred premature femoral neck physeal closures in 430 hips with Perthes' disease have occurred in two patterns central and lateral. Abnormal physeal growth can be demonstrated early by a narrowed physeal plate with overlying avascular epiphysis and marked metaphyseal reaction below. Subsequently, a bony bridge forms between the metaphysis and epiphysis. ⋯ If the physeal closure is lateral, the mature hip will have a femoral head that is externally tilted as the medial neck lengthens and the lateral neck remains short, a trochanter that has overgrown the femoral head, an oval femoral head, a short leg, and a deformed acetabulum. A physeal arrest is a contraindication for a varus osteotomy because it accentuates the deformity, especially in the greater trochanter. The leg-length discrepancy may be treated by epiphysiodesis of the contralateral femur, when necessary, and the abductor muscle insufficiency may be treated by an exercise program or distal and lateral transfer of the greater trochanter.