Femoral supracondylar focal dome osteotomy with plate fixation for acute correction of frontal plane knee deformity

Abstract Focal dome osteotomy (FDO) allows deformity correction without secondary translational deformity. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the degree of correction and knee functional outcome after correction of frontal knee deformity using femoral supracondylar FDO fixed with plate and screws. A prospective study included 12 consecutive cases of femoral frontal plane deformity that underwent correction using supracondylar focal osteotomy fixed by plate and screws. Average age was 27 years, while mean follow-up was 2.1 years. Functional assessment was done using the Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) knee score. The HSS knee score improved from 85 to 96.8 points. Desired correction was achieved in all cases. Postoperative mechanical axis analysis on long film and scanogram showed no secondary deformity. The overall postoperative mechanical axis was at 3.2 mm medially (range 2–5 mm). Autogenous bone graft was not used in any case, and uneventful osteotomy union was achieved at a mean of 13.8 weeks. Minor complications were encountered in two cases. There were no implant failures or reoperations. Supracondylar FDO of the femur with plate fixation is a reproducible technique that can produce full correction of distal femoral frontal plane deformity, while avoiding creating a secondary deformity. Knee function was improved with good patient satisfaction.
Source: Strategies in Trauma and Limb Reconstruction - Category: Orthopaedics Source Type: research