Cargando…

Short-Term Complications Following Early Protected Weight Bearing after Flatfoot Reconstruction when Utilizing a Fibertape Device for Spring Ligament Reefing Augmentation

CATEGORY: Ankle INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: In an estimated 70% of cases of Adult Acquired Flatfoot Deformity (AAFD) reconstruction, the spring ligament is elongated and/or damaged. Spring ligament reefing can be performed through several techniques including augmentation with Fibertape devices. In additi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kim, Morgan S., Vannatta, Emily, Stauch, Chris M., Juliano, Paul J., Aynardi, Michael C., Koroneos, Zachary, Luick, Laura R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8702728/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011420S00295
_version_ 1784621305625051136
author Kim, Morgan S.
Vannatta, Emily
Stauch, Chris M.
Juliano, Paul J.
Aynardi, Michael C.
Koroneos, Zachary
Luick, Laura R.
author_facet Kim, Morgan S.
Vannatta, Emily
Stauch, Chris M.
Juliano, Paul J.
Aynardi, Michael C.
Koroneos, Zachary
Luick, Laura R.
author_sort Kim, Morgan S.
collection PubMed
description CATEGORY: Ankle INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: In an estimated 70% of cases of Adult Acquired Flatfoot Deformity (AAFD) reconstruction, the spring ligament is elongated and/or damaged. Spring ligament reefing can be performed through several techniques including augmentation with Fibertape devices. In addition, biomechanical studies have demonstrated its safety and suggest early weight bearing may be performed. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the outcomes of early weight bearing following flatfoot reconstruction with use of InternalBrace augmentation for spring ligament reefing when performed in combination with medical displacing calcaneal osteotomy (MCO) and FDL tendon transfer. METHODS: From 2016-2018, 45 patients underwent flatfoot reconstruction (MCO, FDL transfer, and gastrocnemius recession) with spring ligament reefing and augmentation with the InternalBrace device. All surgeries were performed by the senior orthopaedic surgeons (PJJ & MCA). Institutional early post-operative weight bearing protocol involves weight bearing as tolerated in a splint with crutches for two weeks, transitioning at 2 weeks to a Cam boot with 1 wedge WBAT. At 4 weeks, the patient is weaned off crutches and recommended to start therapy restricting excessive eversion and concentrating on calf strengthening, gait, and ROM. At weeks 6-8 they are weaned from the Cam boot into lace up ASO and shoe with arch support. Data were recorded at 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 12 weeks, 6 months and at yearly intervals. Outcomes and complications were documented. RESULTS: Of the 45 cases there were no complications related to early weight bearing. Radiographic bony union rate of the MCO was 100% (45/45). Moreover, there was no loss of fixation of either the FDL transfer or spring ligament reefing with InternalBrace augmentation with early weight bearing. Lastly, radiographic evaluation noted no loss of Meary’s talo-first metatarsal angle when comparing initial postoperative radiographic to their final follow up. Additional complications in our cohort included the following: removal of painful hardware (1, 2.22%), sural neuritis (2, 4.44%), superficial cellulitis (1, 4.44%), and delayed lateral wound healing (1, 2.22%). CONCLUSION: Preliminary data shows that early protected weight bearing after flatfoot reconstruction and augmentation of the spring ligament with the InternalBrace device is safe and demonstrates few complications and no early loss of correction.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8702728
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher SAGE Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87027282022-01-28 Short-Term Complications Following Early Protected Weight Bearing after Flatfoot Reconstruction when Utilizing a Fibertape Device for Spring Ligament Reefing Augmentation Kim, Morgan S. Vannatta, Emily Stauch, Chris M. Juliano, Paul J. Aynardi, Michael C. Koroneos, Zachary Luick, Laura R. Foot Ankle Orthop Article CATEGORY: Ankle INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: In an estimated 70% of cases of Adult Acquired Flatfoot Deformity (AAFD) reconstruction, the spring ligament is elongated and/or damaged. Spring ligament reefing can be performed through several techniques including augmentation with Fibertape devices. In addition, biomechanical studies have demonstrated its safety and suggest early weight bearing may be performed. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the outcomes of early weight bearing following flatfoot reconstruction with use of InternalBrace augmentation for spring ligament reefing when performed in combination with medical displacing calcaneal osteotomy (MCO) and FDL tendon transfer. METHODS: From 2016-2018, 45 patients underwent flatfoot reconstruction (MCO, FDL transfer, and gastrocnemius recession) with spring ligament reefing and augmentation with the InternalBrace device. All surgeries were performed by the senior orthopaedic surgeons (PJJ & MCA). Institutional early post-operative weight bearing protocol involves weight bearing as tolerated in a splint with crutches for two weeks, transitioning at 2 weeks to a Cam boot with 1 wedge WBAT. At 4 weeks, the patient is weaned off crutches and recommended to start therapy restricting excessive eversion and concentrating on calf strengthening, gait, and ROM. At weeks 6-8 they are weaned from the Cam boot into lace up ASO and shoe with arch support. Data were recorded at 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 12 weeks, 6 months and at yearly intervals. Outcomes and complications were documented. RESULTS: Of the 45 cases there were no complications related to early weight bearing. Radiographic bony union rate of the MCO was 100% (45/45). Moreover, there was no loss of fixation of either the FDL transfer or spring ligament reefing with InternalBrace augmentation with early weight bearing. Lastly, radiographic evaluation noted no loss of Meary’s talo-first metatarsal angle when comparing initial postoperative radiographic to their final follow up. Additional complications in our cohort included the following: removal of painful hardware (1, 2.22%), sural neuritis (2, 4.44%), superficial cellulitis (1, 4.44%), and delayed lateral wound healing (1, 2.22%). CONCLUSION: Preliminary data shows that early protected weight bearing after flatfoot reconstruction and augmentation of the spring ligament with the InternalBrace device is safe and demonstrates few complications and no early loss of correction. SAGE Publications 2020-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8702728/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011420S00295 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Article
Kim, Morgan S.
Vannatta, Emily
Stauch, Chris M.
Juliano, Paul J.
Aynardi, Michael C.
Koroneos, Zachary
Luick, Laura R.
Short-Term Complications Following Early Protected Weight Bearing after Flatfoot Reconstruction when Utilizing a Fibertape Device for Spring Ligament Reefing Augmentation
title Short-Term Complications Following Early Protected Weight Bearing after Flatfoot Reconstruction when Utilizing a Fibertape Device for Spring Ligament Reefing Augmentation
title_full Short-Term Complications Following Early Protected Weight Bearing after Flatfoot Reconstruction when Utilizing a Fibertape Device for Spring Ligament Reefing Augmentation
title_fullStr Short-Term Complications Following Early Protected Weight Bearing after Flatfoot Reconstruction when Utilizing a Fibertape Device for Spring Ligament Reefing Augmentation
title_full_unstemmed Short-Term Complications Following Early Protected Weight Bearing after Flatfoot Reconstruction when Utilizing a Fibertape Device for Spring Ligament Reefing Augmentation
title_short Short-Term Complications Following Early Protected Weight Bearing after Flatfoot Reconstruction when Utilizing a Fibertape Device for Spring Ligament Reefing Augmentation
title_sort short-term complications following early protected weight bearing after flatfoot reconstruction when utilizing a fibertape device for spring ligament reefing augmentation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8702728/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011420S00295
work_keys_str_mv AT kimmorgans shorttermcomplicationsfollowingearlyprotectedweightbearingafterflatfootreconstructionwhenutilizingafibertapedeviceforspringligamentreefingaugmentation
AT vannattaemily shorttermcomplicationsfollowingearlyprotectedweightbearingafterflatfootreconstructionwhenutilizingafibertapedeviceforspringligamentreefingaugmentation
AT stauchchrism shorttermcomplicationsfollowingearlyprotectedweightbearingafterflatfootreconstructionwhenutilizingafibertapedeviceforspringligamentreefingaugmentation
AT julianopaulj shorttermcomplicationsfollowingearlyprotectedweightbearingafterflatfootreconstructionwhenutilizingafibertapedeviceforspringligamentreefingaugmentation
AT aynardimichaelc shorttermcomplicationsfollowingearlyprotectedweightbearingafterflatfootreconstructionwhenutilizingafibertapedeviceforspringligamentreefingaugmentation
AT koroneoszachary shorttermcomplicationsfollowingearlyprotectedweightbearingafterflatfootreconstructionwhenutilizingafibertapedeviceforspringligamentreefingaugmentation
AT luicklaurar shorttermcomplicationsfollowingearlyprotectedweightbearingafterflatfootreconstructionwhenutilizingafibertapedeviceforspringligamentreefingaugmentation