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      Open wedge high tibial osteotomy using fractioned drill osteotomy: a surgical modification that lowers the complication rate

      , , ,
      Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy
      Springer Nature

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          High tibial osteotomy for varus gonarthrosis. A long-term follow-up study.

          We evaluated the results in eighty-three patients (ninety-five knees) who had had a high tibial osteotomy for either unicompartmental osteoarthritis or osteonecrosis. The operations were performed between 1965 and 1976. The mean length of follow-up was 8.9 years (range, five to fifteen years). The early results were promising: at two years 97 per cent and at five years 85 per cent of the knees had either an excellent or a good result. At subsequent follow-up, however, only sixty knees (63 per cent) had an excellent or good result, and in the remainder recurrent pain had developed. Twenty-two knees (23 per cent) had been revised to a total knee arthroplasty because of pain. The alignment obtained by the osteotomy was not as important in determining the long-term result as we had previously believed. Although recurrent varus deformity was observed in more than one-quarter of the knees, it was not necessarily associated with an unsatisfactory result. The passage of time was the most important factor in determining the result, as only fifteen (37 per cent) of the knees that had been followed for more than nine years were pain-free. We now believe that total knee arthroplasty is a more suitable operation for patients who are more than sixty years old and that high tibial osteotomy should be reserved for patients who have a strenuous occupation or who wish to continue to participate in sports activities.
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            Upper tibial osteotomy for osteoarthritis.

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              Principles and results of corrective lower limb osteotomies for patients with vitamin D-resistant hypophosphatemic rickets.

              Forty-four lower limb osteotomies were performed in ten patients with vitamin D-resistant hypophosphatemic rickets. The average follow-up period was 51 months. Osteotomies were combined with shortening and compression plating. This allowed corrections of angular deformities in the sagittal plane as large as 70 degrees and in the coronal plane as large as 78 degrees. There was one complication, a compartment syndrome that resolved completely following prompt fasciotomy. Recurrence of deformity occurred in 27% of the cases. While osteotomies were safe and provided dramatic improvement to limb deformity, postoperative control of vitamin D metabolism was the one constant factor for maintenance of correction.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy
                Knee Surg, Sports traumatol, Arthroscopy
                Springer Nature
                0942-2056
                1433-7347
                September 1996
                September 1996
                : 4
                : 3
                : 149-153
                Article
                10.1007/BF01577407
                f14b77cc-afe2-4053-ba69-aa11be93c88d
                © 1996
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