AI Article Synopsis

  • Moderate to severe hallux valgus often necessitates the Lapidus procedure, which traditionally uses a dorsal approach; however, recent studies suggest that tension-side fixation offers better stability and outcomes.
  • A study analyzed 81 patients undergoing tension-side fixation, revealing a mean time of 10.4 days to weight-bearing and low rates of hardware removal (1.2%), recurrence (8.6%), and no revisions needed.
  • Complications included low rates of superficial dehiscence (7%) and infections (1.2%), indicating that tension-side fixation may facilitate faster recovery with minimal complications.

Article Abstract

Moderate to severe hallux valgus deformity often requires a Lapidus procedure (first-tarsometatarsal arthrodesis). Traditional methods include a dorsal approach with dorsal or medial fixation. However, studies demonstrate plantar/tension-side fixation, provides superior load to failure and fixation strength. This could improve outcomes, address comorbidities, and accelerate postoperative protocols; however, a paucity exists for patient outcomes in the literature regarding tension-side-fixation. The purpose of this study is to report the outcomes for tension-side Lapidus fixation. A retrospective analysis was performed of 81 patients who underwent tension-side-fixation Lapidus. Data collection consisted of: time to weight-bear, time to return to regular shoegear, hardware removal rate, revision rate, recurrence rate, relative metatarsal shortening, and nonunion rates. Mean patient age was 44 years old (range: 16-82). There were 65 females, and 16 males. The average time to weightbearing was 10.4 days. Time to return to regular shoegear was a mean of 6 weeks (ranging 2-10 weeks). Hardware removal rate was 1.2%. The recurrence rate was 8.6% (7 of 81 patients) and 5 of those 7 patients experienced recurrence before frontal-plane-correction was adopted by the surgeon. The revision rate was 0% and despite 8.6% recurrence, no patients were dissatisfied or requested a revisional procedure. The first-metatarsal shortening was a mean of 0.42 mm. The complications were as follows: 7% superficial dehiscence, 1.2% superficial wound infection, 0% deep infection, and 1.2% asymptomatic nonunion. This study suggests tension-side-fixation for Lapidus arthrodesis may allow for safe early return to weightbearing, early return to regular shoegear, low hardware removal rate, low revision rate, low metatarsal shortening, and low nonunion rate.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1053/j.jfas.2024.01.008DOI Listing

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