Limb Lengthening With Precice Intramedullary Lengthening Nails in Children and Adolescents
医学
髓内棒
外科
作者
Christof Radler,Gabriel T. Mindler,Alexandra Stauffer,Carina Weiß,Rudolf Ganger
出处
期刊:Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics [Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer)] 日期:2021-11-18卷期号:Publish Ahead of Print
标识
DOI:10.1097/bpo.0000000000002016
摘要
Background The Precice intramedullary bone lengthening nail has been used in our department since 2013. We sought to determine the efficacy and safety of intramedullary limb lengthening with Precice nails in children and adolescents. Methods We retrospectively investigated patients 18 years and younger who underwent lower-limb lengthening using the Precice nail. Radiologic and clinical outcome data were obtained from a prospective database. The minimum postimplantation follow-up was 12 months. Between March 2013 and March 2020, 161 patients underwent limb lengthening with a Precice nail; 76 patients met the inclusion criteria. Results We used 84 nails in 76 patients (68 femurs and 16 tibias). Femoral nails were inserted using an antegrade approach in 57 patients and a retrograde approach in 11. The mean age at surgery was 16 years (range, 9 to 18 y). The mean lengthening was 33 mm (range, 14 to 80 mm) with additional acute axial or rotational malalignment correction in 16 segments. At the last follow-up (mean=2.1, years; range, 1 to 5 y), all regenerates had healed and all patients were mobile with full weight-bearing. Complications that necessitated surgical revision occurred in 6 patients (8%), and the desired lengthening was not achieved in 2 patients. Postlengthening malalignment occurred in 4 patients (5 tibial nails). The weight-bearing index, defined as days from surgery to full weight-bearing/cm of lengthening, was a mean of 45 days (range, 7 to 127 d/cm). Conclusions The Precice nail facilitated reliable and safe bone lengthening and was associated with a low complication rate. Correction of additional malalignment was possible by applying intraoperative acute correction or guided growth. Level of evidence Level IV-therapeutic study investigating the results of treatment.