Congenital pseudoarthrosis of the tibia and fibula is managed with plate osteosynthesis and the Ilizarov method
Kuldeep Chhatbar, Parth Shah
Corresponding author: Kuldeep Chhatbar, Department of Orthopedics, Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences, Wardha, Maharashtra, India
Received: 23 Aug 2022 - Accepted: 09 Jan 2023 - Published: 10 Jan 2023
Domain: Orthopedic surgery
Keywords: Congenital, pseudarthrosis, tibia, corticotomy
©Kuldeep Chhatbar et al. PAMJ Clinical Medicine (ISSN: 2707-2797). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Cite this article: Kuldeep Chhatbar et al. Congenital pseudoarthrosis of the tibia and fibula is managed with plate osteosynthesis and the Ilizarov method. PAMJ Clinical Medicine. 2023;11:12. [doi: 10.11604/pamj-cm.2023.11.12.36971]
Available online at: https://www.clinical-medicine.panafrican-med-journal.com//content/article/11/12/full
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Congenital pseudoarthrosis of the tibia and fibula is managed with plate osteosynthesis and the Ilizarov method
Congenital pseudoarthrosis of the tibia and fibula is managed with plate osteosynthesis and the Ilizarov method
&Corresponding author
Pseudo means false, and arthrosis means joint formation. Congenital pseudoarthrosis (C.P.T.) of the tibia is a rare congenital anomaly. The incidence of it is one in 190,000 live births. Although rare, C.P.T. of the tibia poses one of the most challenging management problems in pediatric orthopaedics. It is characterized by de-ossification, bending, and pathological fracture, followed by the inability to form a normal callus at the fracture site. Fifty-five percent of cases of pseudoarthrosis are associated with neurofibromatosis-1 (NF-1), and 6% of patients with NF-1 develop pseudoarthrosis of the tibia. A 9-year-old male came to the orthopaedic outpatient department with a deformity over his right leg since birth. There were multiple café au lait spots on the front and back of the trunk. The right leg had a bony deformity in the lower third with anterior convexity, with typical features of pseudarthrosis tibia and fibula, along with gross abnormal mobility and 2 cm shortening. The left leg was normal. There is no evidence of any new bone formation at the non-union sites. The patient was managed with refreshing the bone ends to produce bleeding bone ends with good contact and open removal of aberrant fibrous tissue from the region of the tibia's pseudoarthrosis. Bone fragments were reduced and fixed with a locking plate. Corticotomy was done at the proximal end of the tibia to improve the limb length discrepancy via the distraction osteogenesis method, and an Ilizarov ring fixator was applied. Postoperatively, distraction was done at 1 mm per day.
Figure 1: A) angular deformity over the right lower leg and café au lait spots; B) X-ray of the right leg reveals bony discontinuity in both the tibia and fibula at the lower third shaft with narrowing and sclerosis of bone ends at the pseudarthrosis site; C) X-ray of the right leg shows corticotomy and plate osteosynthesis; D) shows fixation with Ilizarov ring fixator