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Wheeless' Textbook of Orthopaedics
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Treatment of patellofemoral instability in Down's syndrome


Mendez-AA; Keret-D; MacEwen-GD Department of Medical Education, Alfred I. duPont Institute, Wilmington, DE 19899. Clin-Orthop. 1988 Sep(234): 148-58 In a retrospective review, 16 patients with Down's syndrome with the chief complaint of patellofemoral joint dislocations or subluxations were studied. Twenty-six dislocatable or dislocated patellae were seen in these 16 patients. The degree of patellofemoral instability was not correlated with either the ambulatory status or the form of treatment (operative/nonoperative). An increasing degree of patellofemoral instability was correlated strongly with the presence of deformities. Nonoperative treatment either maintained or improved the ambulatory status in 67% of these knees with either fair or good ambulation, whereas 80% of the knees with poor ambulation did not improve. Operative treatment resulted in good ambulatory ability in 86% of the knees with fair or poor preoperative ambulatory status, but did not effectively correct deformities that subsequently resulted in degenerative arthritis.



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