Malunion - Principals and Management - Dr Chintan N. Patel
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Jun 11, 2017
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About This Presentation
ORTHOPAEDICS - Principals and management of Malunion with Examples
Size: 4.55 MB
Language: en
Added: Jun 11, 2017
Slides: 45 pages
Slide Content
Malunion: The Principles
and Management
PRESENTER : Dr CHINTAN N
PATEL
CHAIR PERSON : Dr S.T.
SANIKOP
Dept of Orthopaedics , J.N. Medical College and
Dr. Prabhakar Kore Hospital and MRC, Belgaum
Objectives
To understand:
•the definition of malunion
•the natural history of malunions
•the indications for treatment
•the surgical alternatives
Definition of Malunion
•Site
–upper vs lower extremity
–spine / pelvis
•Location
–intra-articular
–extra-articular
»metaphyseal
»diaphyseal
–combined
Malunion is defined as a healing of the bones in an
abnormal position
Definition of Malunion
•Direction
–angular
–rotational
–translation
–length
Malunion
Etiology:
•Failure of nonoperative treatment
•Failure of operative treatment
–incomplete surgical correction
–inadequate stability of fixation
–noncompliance of the patient
Importance of Limb Alignment
Detrimental effects of malalignment
Immediate
Functional limitations
Pain
Chronic
Joint related ( arthritis)
Management Overview
• Anatomical assessment
–Limb
»assessment of deformity
»status of surrounding joints
• Patient expectations
• Available Literature on expected outcome
• Surgeon experience
Management - History and Physical
Examination
• Injury
–mechanism
–energy
• Fracture
–location
–pattern
–bone loss
–ROM of
surrounding joints
• Soft-tissues status
–incisions
–Defects
• Previous treatment
–type
–stability
–complication(s)
Assessment of Limb Alignment
Comparison with contralateral limb important
Assessment of Joint
Arthroscopy MRI
Alternates for Nonsalvagble Joint
•Debridement
•Arthrodiesis
•Arthroplasty
Biomechanical Principles
Effect of Surgery on:
•joint function
•alignment
•soft tissues
•limb length
Deformity Correction
General Considerations:
•Functional assessment – disability
•GOAL: Anatomical correction of deformity
•UL - upto 3 to 4 cm shortening well
tolerated.
•LL – upto 2 cm shortening treated with
Shoe Raise.
Timing for Deformity
Correction
•Extra-articular - controversial
•Intra-articular - ASAP
Surgical Overview
Preoperative Plan: selection of ,
•surgical approach / exposure
•osteotomy - location / type
•fixation technique(s)
•intraoperative use of,
–femoral distractor
–bone graft / substitute
Surgical Overview
Osteotomy
• site of deformity
• closed vs open
• simple vs multi planar
• technique -
–Predrill / osteotome
–Saw (irrigate)
Osteotomy
Type of deformity
length
rotational
angular
complex
Type of osteotomy
Transverse
Transverse
Oblique
Wedge(opening/closing)
Bi- / Tri- planar
Crescentic (Dome)
Intraoperative Fixation
•Open fixation:
–If stable - IM nail vs plate vs circular
fixation
–lag screw with plate
•Closed fixation:
–IM nail
–percutaneous plate
–circular fixation
Tibial Diaphysis Malunion
Options for Fixation:
•IM Nail
•Plate
•Circular Fixator
Case Example
35 year female
•closed tibia fracture
•Cast immobilization
•healed
•complains of “toe
turned out”
Case Example
•Deformity:
–20º external
rotation
–10 º procurvatum
–5º varus
•Confirmed:
–clinical exam &
CT scanogram
Case Example
•Osteotomy of tibia:
–biplanar transverse:
»closing anterior
& lateral wedge
and derotation
»oblique
osteotomy of
fibula
•Fixation:
–periarticular plate
5. Malunion of Ankle Fractures
Radiographic exam
Malunion Ankle Fractures
STEPS:
»fibular osteotomy - assess length
» osteotomy medial malleollus and/or
post malleollus if necessary
» reduce syndesmosis / joint
» temporary fixation
» stabilize fibula
6. Malunited Humerus
CUBITUS VARUS
“Gun-stock
Deformity” –
Looks like a
loading stock of
old long barrel
guns
TREATMENT
Lateral closing wedge osteotomy
Easiest
Safest
Most stable inherently
Medial open wedge osteotomy with
bone graft
Oblique osteotomy with derotation
CUBITUS VARUS
French Osteotomy
Post. Longitudinal approach
Detach whole of triceps
Ulnar nerve explored
Medial cortex broken
Modified French
Osteotomy
(Bellemore)
Posterolateral approach
Lateral half of triceps
detached
Ulnar nerve Not explored
Medial cortex intact so
more stability
Target normal clavicle
7. MALUNITED CLAVICLE
Double- osteotomy planned and practiced on solid
Real Bone models
Planned correction
Abnormal clavicle
Treatment PlanTreatment Plan
Closing wedge osteotomy peformed
at mid-clavicle, bone wedge removed
Opening wedge osteotomy
performed in lateral third, grafted with
bone wedge
BONE REMODELING in
CHILDREN
Fractures close to ends of long bones
remodel much faster than fractures in
mid-shaft. Hence remodeling is faster
in PHYSEAL > METAPHYSEAL
>DIAPHYSEAL INJURIES.
UL- most active growth plate is at
PROXIMAL HUMERUS AND
DISTAL RADIUS AND ULNA, hence
injuries of Proximal Humerus and
Wrist remodel faster than injuries of
elbow and proximal forearm.
Inverse for the LL- remodeling is faster
at the Knee- Distal Femur and
Proximal Tibia than in Proximal
Femur and Distal Tibia.
ACCEPTABLE DEFORMITY
Distal Radius Metaphyseal # – 15 degrees of primary
angulation and 1cm of shortening in boys upto 14 years
and girls upto 12 years.
Radius-Ulna shaft # -upto 10 degrees of plastic
deformation acceptable.
Radius neck # -upto 30 degrees angulation, 2mm
translocation remodel.
Supracondylar Humerus # - upto 20 degrees angulation
in sagital plane remodel but no angular remodeling in
coronal plane
Humerus shaft # - 20 degrees angulation and upto 2 cm
bayonet shortening acceptable.
Malunion Treatment
•Goals
–Improve function
–Decrease pain
–Prevent arthrosis
•Conclusion:
Corrective osteotomy has a definite role in the
treatment of malunited fractures.