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Published byNicole Pearl Modified over 10 years ago
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High Tibial Osteotomy Planning and Indications
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45yo female Active lifestyle Not overweight
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12 weeks
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Goals of Treatment – Pain Relief – Maintain or Improve function Stay in the work force Sport
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Non – Operative Treatment Lifestyle Modification – Weight loss – Low impact – Change occupation – Change sport
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Non – Operative Treatment Paracetamol NSAIDs – significant reduction in pain compared to placebo – GIT risks Glucosamine / Chondroitin Sulfate – Cochrane review = no definitive clinical benefit vs placebo Steroid Injection – Effective short term Viscosupplementation – Cochrane review no benefit over placebo
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Non – Operative Treatment Physiotherapy – Relationship / painful treatment – Quads strengthening – Stretching
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Non – Operative Treatment Bracing and heel wedges – Some effect – Daily use? – 2 years - 25% compliance
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Operative Treatment Options Needle Lavage – Not significant benefit Arthroscopic Debridement – Reserved for mechanical symptoms
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Operative Treatment Options UKA – Good patient satisfaction – Physiologic function – Accelerated rehab and recovery time – Discharge day 1-3 – Conversion to TKR improving – Double the revision rate compared to TKR – labour – Bone stock
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TKR
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Operative Treatment Options HTO Morrey JBJS 1989 – 34 osteotomies – 7.5 yr fu – 73% satisfactory results Bourne 1999 – 106 Osteotomies – Survivorship 5yrs = 73%, 10yrs = 51% – In patient <50 5yrs = 95%, 10yrs = 80% Hui Am J Sports Med 2010 – 349 osteotomies – Mean fu 12 years (1-19yrs), avg age 50yrs – Survival 5yrs = 95%, 10yrs = 79%, 15yrs = 56% – 10yrs = 21% failure rate (reoperation) Results for conversion HTO to Primary TKR not different to primary OA to TKR Results UKR to TKR slightly better than a TKR to revision TKR
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Operative Treatment Options HTO downside General risks Non-union Fracture Painful Long rehab Pain not all gone Arthroplasty in the future
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Lateral Closing Wedge
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12 weeks Medial Opening Wedge
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Indications Genu Varum with medial OA Adult OCD Osteonecrosis PLC instability
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Appropriate Patient Young patient (<60 relative) Active Motivated for rehabilitation BMI <30 (<1.32x ideal bw)
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Appropriate Joint Unicompartmental pathology Correlation with XRs Non Inflammatory FFD <15degrees Flexion arc >90 degrees Varus <15 degrees, Valgus <12 degrees
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Contraindications Smokers Lateral compartment OA or previous injury / menesectomy Inconsistent pain Inflammatory arthritis Obese (BMI >30) FFD >15 degrees
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Pre – op Planning Correct patient Deformity – Tibial – Femoral – Both Axes – Mechanical – Anatomical Correction desired Implant choice Graft type
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Pre – op Planning - Deformity Standing Long leg views MRI to check other compartments
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Pre – op Planning - Deformity mLDFA = 88 o mPTA = 81 o
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Pre – op Planning - Axis Mechanical Axis Femoral – Tibial – 2 o varus med 75%, lat 25% – 0 o (centre) med 60% lat 40% – 4 o valgus med 50% lat 50% – 6 o valgus med 40% lat 60% Correction angle – Angle of deformity + 4-6 o = 14 o 8o8o mLDFA = 88 o mPTA = 81 o
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Pre – op Planning – Fujisawa point Simplify 14 degrees 14 o
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Pre – op Planning – Correction Now we know the angle of correction - ? mm opening First 10mm : 1mm = 1 o correction – Variation in tibial length and metaphyseal width – 14 mm < 14 o C- arm II Navigation
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Pre – op Planning – Correction Now we know the angle of correction - ? mm opening First 10mm : 1mm = 1 o correction – Variation in tibial length and metaphyseal width – 14 mm < 14 o
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Fixation Spacer plate Rigid locked plates
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Bone Graft Opening wedge Structural support Biological healing Scaffold Autograft vs Allograft vs Synthetic substitute No need?
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Steps 123
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Summary Correct patient Locate the deformity for correction Axes Correction Implant Graft
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