Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2715519 The Journal of Foot and Ankle Surgery 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

A common surgical treatment of severe hallux abductovalgus deformity with coincident first ray hypermobility is metatarsal-cuneiform fusion or Lapidus procedure. The aim of the present study was to illustrate a reliable and novel method of fixation for Lapidus fusion using an external fixation device through a retrospective cohort investigation of consecutive patients. Twenty Lapidus fusions were performed in 19 patients, including 17 females (89.47%) and 2 males (10.53%). The mean age at surgery was 41 (range 20 to 64) years. The patients were evaluated clinically and radiographically pre- and postoperatively. The mean duration in the fixator was 12 (range 3 to 34) weeks. The mean interval to radiographic union was 9.2 (range 4.7 to 30.7) weeks in 18 of 20 feet (90%) and 2 (10%) were designated as nonunion. The mean follow-up period was 37 (range 5.6 to 211.1) weeks. The most common complication was pin tract infection in 5 patients (6 feet) and was treated with oral antibiotics; only 1 foot required early hardware removal. According to the visual analog scale, the mean patient pain score decreased significantly from 8.2 ± 2.7 to 0.83 ± 0.98 postoperatively (p < .001). Our results highlight that immediate weightbearing after Lapidus fusion with external fixation is a viable treatment option for the correction of severe hallux abductovalgus with associated hypermobility.

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