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Published in: Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery 5/2004

01-06-2004 | Original Article

A comparison of two osteotomy techniques for tibial lengthening

Authors: Levent Eralp, Mehmet Kocaoğlu, Korhan Özkan, Mehmet Türker

Published in: Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery | Issue 5/2004

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Abstract

Introduction

There are various methods of long bone lengthening. The quality of the regenerated bone depends on stable external fixation, low energy corticotomy, latency period, optimum lengthening rate and rhythm, and functional use of the limb. Percutaneous corticotomy and ostetomy with multiple drill holes yield the best results for the quality of the regenerated bone. An alternative low energy osteotomy, which respects the periosteum, is the Afghan percutaneous osteotomy. The purpose of the current study was to compare a percutaneous multiple drill hole osteotomy with a Gigli saw osteotomy in terms of the healing index (HI).

Materials and methods

Forty-four tibias of 41 patients were lengthened at our institution between 1995 and 2000. All patients underwent limb lengthening without any deformity correction by the Ilizarov device. The etiology of the limb length discrepancy was sequelae to poliomyelitis in 16 tibias, idiopathic hypoplasia in 17 tibias, posttraumatic discrepancy in 5 tibias, bilateral tibial lengthening in achondroplastic dwarfism in 3 patients. Patients with metabolic bone diseases were not included in this series.

Results

The mean amount of length discrepancy was 5.7 cm (range 2–12 cm). The mean HI of the whole group was 1.65 month/cm (range 1.1–2.4 month/cm). When comparing the osteotomy methods without taking the etiology into consideration, the percutaneous, multiple drill hole group yielded a mean HI of 1.98 month/cm (range 1.4–2.4 month/cm), while the Gigli saw group yielded a mean HI of 1.37 month/cm (range 1.1–1.8 month/cm). There was a statistically significant difference between the two groups (p=0.022). The Gigli saw patients with poliomyelitis had a significantly better HI compared with patients who underwent lengthening by the other form of osteotomy (1.1 vs 1.9 month/cm; p=0.027).

Conclusion

Our results confirm the biologic superiority of the Gigli saw technique.
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Metadata
Title
A comparison of two osteotomy techniques for tibial lengthening
Authors
Levent Eralp
Mehmet Kocaoğlu
Korhan Özkan
Mehmet Türker
Publication date
01-06-2004
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery / Issue 5/2004
Print ISSN: 0936-8051
Electronic ISSN: 1434-3916
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00402-004-0646-9

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