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The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Vol 75, Issue 7 1056-1066, Copyright © 1993 by Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc
Salvage, with arthrodesis, in intractable diabetic neuropathic arthropathy of the foot and ankle
J Papa, M Myerson and P Girard
Johns Hopkins University, Foot and Ankle Center, Union Memorial Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland 21218.
Twenty-nine patients who had diabetic neuropathic arthropathy of the foot
and ankle were managed with open reduction and arthrodesis of various
joints. Rigid internal fixation was used in all but four patients, who had
external fixation. All patients had severe instability or a fixed deformity
that precluded successful treatment with bracing. The sites of the
fracture-dislocations or the neuropathic dislocations were the ankle in
twenty-one patients, the subtalar joint in six, and the transverse tarsal
joint in two. The ankle-brachial Doppler indices of these patients averaged
0.86 (range, 0.55 to 1.14). The involved extremities were graded at the
initial evaluations according to the Wagner classification system for
neuropathic ulceration. The grade was 0 in fourteen patients, I in seven,
II in two, and III in six. A tibiocalcaneal arthrodesis was performed after
a talectomy in eleven patients; a tibiotalar arthrodesis, in eight; a
triple arthrodesis, in six; a pantalar arthrodesis, in two; and a
tibiotalocalcaneal arthrodesis, in two. Postoperatively, all patients
remained non-weight-bearing and wore a below-the-knee plaster cast for two
months. Weight-bearing was then begun with the leg in a total-contact
plaster cast, and use of the cast was continued for a mean of five months
(range, four to fourteen months). Thereafter, a polypropylene ankle-foot
orthosis was used permanently. The most recent evaluation of the patients
was performed at an average of forty-two months (range, fourteen to
sixty-eight months) after the arthrodesis. There were twenty complications
in nineteen of the twenty-nine patients, and there were nine pseudarthroses
(six tibiocalcaneal, one tibiotalar, and two talonavicular). However, seven
of the pseudarthroses were clinically stable. In these patients, the
arthrodesis was performed as an alternative to amputation, and salvage was
successful in twenty-seven (93 per cent) of the twenty-nine patients.

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