Foot and Ankle International
Tracking Pixel
presents
Wheeless' Textbook of Orthopaedics

Complications of limb lengthening. A learning curve. ³


* Dahl MT. Gulli B. Berg T. Clinical Orthopaedics & Related Research. (301):10-8, 1994 Apr. Major complication rates during limb lengthening were plotted in a consecutive series to produce a learning curve. All unwanted events during Á and after treatment were considered complications, and graded as minor, Â serious, and severe. All serious and severe complications were considered major. A novel system was used to classify the preoperative severity of each deformity. One-hundred ten patients had 140 bone segments lengthened between 2.2 cm and 10.5 cm, with a mean of 4.4 cm. Three methods were used in lengthening: the Wagner method in 22 patients, the DeBastiani method in 34 patients, and the Ilizarov method in 84 patients. Ninety-eight complications categorized as serious or severe occurred, for a total major complication rate of 72%. The percentage of major complications began to drop after 30 lengthenings to a current rate of 25%. Major complications were frequent in patients with more severe deformities, particularly in * those whose cases occurred early in the series. Bone healing complications were high (72%) in the Wagner segments but were also high (80%) in the first ten patients treated with the DeBastiani technique. The first ten Ilizarov patients, who were treated later in the series, had a 40% rate of Á bone-healing complications. The current rate of major complications is 13% for those patients treated with DeBastiani's method and 33% for those patients treated with Ilizarov's method. This difference in complication rates appears to relate to the severity of the deformity, rather than the device used. There was a significant decrease in complications as experience was gained. Directed formal study and surgical instruction should help diminish these complications.



Original Text by Clifford R. Wheeless, III, MD.