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412556

Centralization of the foot in tibial and fibular hemimelia

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Last updated: 25 Feb 2025

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Abstract

Purpose
To assess the midterm results of acute centralization of the foot in cases of tibial and fibular hemimelia associated with severe foot deformity and ankle dislocation.
Patients and methods
We treated 11 limbs in 10 patients: eight patients with tibial hemimelia and two patients with fibular hemimelia. All cases were associated with severe foot deformity (equinovarus in tibial hemimelia and equinovalgus in fibular hemimelia), dislocated ankle, and tight tendoachilis. There were seven boys and three girls, with a mean age of 2.35 years. In tibial hemimelia, two limbs were type Ia, four limbs were type II, and three limbs were type IV according to Jones classification. In fibular hemimelia, all cases were type II according to Achterman and Kalamachi classification. The mean preoperative limb-length discrepancy was 5.4 cm (range, 4.5–7 cm). We had acute centralization of the foot by means of calcaneofibular or tibiocalcaneal arthrodesis in cases of tibial or fibular hemimelia, respectively, and talectomy, fibular shortening, and tibiofibular synostosis were done. Transcalcaneal fibular Kirschner wire was inserted to maintain the foot position. First-stage lengthening by Ilizarov fixator was done, with 5-cm gain of length in seven cases, and second-stage lengthening was done in two cases.
Results
The mean follow-up period was 50 months. We achieved foot correction and centralization of the foot, which was stable in all cases, except one with failed tibiofibular synostosis in Jones type IV. No neurovascular complications occurred. Wound dehiscence occurred in five limbs, unstable knee was seen in two cases, recurrent equinus of more than 20° was seen in three cases, and two cases had poor regenerate potential. All patients and families were satisfied with the foot procedure and were not satisfied with knee centralization procedure owing to knee instability.
Conclusion
Acute centralization of the severely deformed foot in cases of tibial and fibular hemimelia by calcaneofibular or tibiocalcaneal arthrodesis, respectively, can correct severe foot deformity, achieve plantigrade foot, and preserve the patient but was associated with many secondary procedures.
Level of evidence
Level IV.

DOI

10.4103/eoj.eoj_33_21

Keywords

centralization of the foot, fibular hemimelia, Tibial hemimelia

Authors

First Name

Nabil

Last Name

Abou Sheishaa

MiddleName

A.E.

Affiliation

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Orcid

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First Name

Wael

Last Name

El-Adl

MiddleName

A.M.

Affiliation

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Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Mohamed

Last Name

El-Batouty

MiddleName

M.

Affiliation

-

Email

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City

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Orcid

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Volume

55

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

53902

Issue Date

2020-04-01

Publish Date

2020-04-01

Page Start

106

Page End

114

Print ISSN

1110-1148

Online ISSN

2090-9926

Link

https://eoj.journals.ekb.eg/article_412556.html

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http://journals.ekb.eg?_action=service&article_code=412556

Order

412,556

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Egyptian Orthopaedic Journal

Publication Link

https://eoj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Centralization of the foot in tibial and fibular hemimelia

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Article

Created At

25 Feb 2025