The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 83:247 (2001)
© 2001 The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc.
Altered Fibular Growth Patterns After Tibiofibular Synostosis in Children
Steven L. Frick, MD,
Scott Shoemaker, MD and
Scott J. Mubarak, MD
Investigation performed at the Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Children's Hospital-San Diego and University of California
at San Diego, San Diego, California
Steven L. Frick, MD
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Carolinas Medical Center, P.O.
Box 38261, Charlotte, NC 28232. E-mail address: sfrick{at}carolinas.org
Scott Shoemaker, MD
Scott J. Mubarak, MD
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Children's Hospital-San Diego,
3030 Children's Way, San Diego, CA 92123-4208
No benefits in any form have been received or will be received
from a commercial party related directly or indirectly to the subject
of this article. No funds were received in support of this study.
Background: Iatrogenic synostosis of the tibia
and fibula following an operation on the leg in a child has been reported
rarely in the literature, and the effects of this complication on
future growth, alignment, and function are not known. This is a
retrospective case series, from one institution, of crossunions
of the distal parts of the tibia and fibula complicating operations
on the leg in children. The purpose is to alert surgeons to this
possible complication.
Methods: The senior author identified eight cases
of iatrogenic tibiofibular synostosis seen in children since 1985.
The patients had various diagnoses and were from the practices of
four pediatric orthopaedic surgeons. Synostosis developed in six
patients after osteotomies of the distal parts of the tibia and
fibula, in one after internal fixation of distal tibial and fibular
metaphyseal fractures through a single incision, and in one after
posterior transfer of the anterior tibialis tendon through the interosseous membrane
combined with peroneus brevis transfer to the calcaneus. Medical
records were reviewed, and preoperative and follow-up radiographs
were analyzed for changes in the relative positions of the proximal
and distal tibial and fibular physes and in the alignment of the
ankle.
Results: Five patients were symptomatic after crossunion; they
presented with prominence of the proximal part of the fibula, ankle
deformity, or ankle pain. Three patients were asymptomatic, and
a synostosis was identified on routine follow-up radiographs. Intraoperative
technical errors caused two of the crossunions; the cause of the
others was unknown. Following tibiofibular synostosis, growth disturbances
were noted radiographically in every patient. The normal growth
pattern of distal migration of the fibula relative to the tibia
was reversed, resulting in a decreased distance between the proximal
physes of the tibia and fibula as well as proximal migration of
the distal fibular physis relative to the distal part of the tibia.
Shortening of the lateral malleolus led to greater valgus alignment
of the ankle.
Conclusions: Tibiofibular synostosis can complicate
an operation on the leg in a child. After crossunion, the normal
distal movement of the fibula relative to the tibia is disrupted,
resulting in shortening of the lateral malleolus and ankle valgus
as well as prominence of the fibular head at the knee. The synostosis
also interferes with the normal motion that occurs between the tibia
and fibula with weight-bearing, potentially leading to ankle pain.

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