1 / 33

Modified Lapidus Procedure for Hallux Abducto Valgus (bunion) Deformity

Modified Lapidus Procedure for Hallux Abducto Valgus (bunion) Deformity. Alicia Williams, DPM June 9,2010 Dr.Anain Jr-Director Dr.DiDomenico-Mentor. First Ray Anatomy. Tendons inserting on the first ray:

libitha
Télécharger la présentation

Modified Lapidus Procedure for Hallux Abducto Valgus (bunion) Deformity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Modified Lapidus ProcedureforHalluxAbductoValgus(bunion) Deformity Alicia Williams, DPM June 9,2010 Dr.Anain Jr-Director Dr.DiDomenico-Mentor

  2. First Ray Anatomy • Tendons inserting on the first ray: • Tibialis Anterior-inserts on the medial cuneiform and base of the first metatarsal • PeroneusLongus-inserts on the first metatarsal • Flexor HallucisBrevis-divides into 2 muscle bellies -encase the sesamoids -inserts on the base of proximal phalanx • Abductor Hallucis-inserts medially on base of proximal phalanx

  3. First Ray anatomy • No muscles originate on the first met • The first metatarsal is held in alignment, by splinting action of the abductor hallucis medially and pull of the peroneus muscle laterally acting on base of the metatarsal

  4. Anataomy

  5. Introduction • The hallux deviates inward toward the lesser toes(valgus) • A bump starts to develop on the medial aspect of the metatarsal • The prominence is known as the bunion

  6. Introduction • “bunion” a structual deformity of the bones and joint of the first metatarsal • May often present with a bursa (sac of fluid) between tendons and bone or even skin and bone and often painful with palpation

  7. Biomechanics • In the gait cycle stance phase begins with heel contact lateral to the ankle joint and ends in the support phase in which our body weight is centered near the first metatarsal • Shock absorption • Distributing plantar pressure to the heel and heads of the metatarsals

  8. Biomechanics • Mobile first ray will dorsiflex on weight acceptance to prevent trauma to the head of the first metatarsal • Limited dorsal mobility will cause an increase of plantar pressure resulting callus build up and eventually ulceration

  9. Test for Hypermobility

  10. Hypermobile First Ray

  11. Hallux Abductus Angle(HA) • (HA)-created by the bissection of the longitudinal axis of the hallux and longitudinal axis of the first met • Normal is less the 15° • Greater than 15 degrees considered abnormal

  12. Intermetatarsal Angle • Determined by the bisection of the longitudinal axes of the first and second metatarsal • Less than 9° is considered normal • Often used to determine surgical correction

  13. Met Protrusion Distance • Comparison of the 1st and 2nd relative metatarsal length • Determined by the measurement between the two arcs that represent the 1st and 2nd lengths • Normal is + 2 • + if 1st metatarsal is longer than the second • - if 2nd metatarsal is longer than the first

  14. Treatment • Conservative: changing footwear(wide toebox, good arch support), anti-inflammatory meds, padding • Surgical: various techniques which include osteotomies in the head of metatarsal, base ostetomy, fusion of met-cuneiform joint

  15. Surgical Correction • Austin bunionectomy • Head osteotomy • Creating a “V” shaped osteotomy in the head of the metatarsal

  16. Surgical Correction • Closing Base Wedge Osteotomy • Osteotomy created in base of metatarsal • Wedge of bone is removed • Achieve reduction of intermetatarsal angle

  17. Surgical Correction • Open Wedge Osteotomy • Short metatarsal • Osteotomy is created in the proximal shaft of the first metatarsa • Bone graft inserted to increase the length of the metatarsal

  18. Surgical Correction • Lapidus Bunionectomy • Hypermobility of the first ray • Intermetatarsal angle greater than 18° • Fusion of the first metatarso-cuneiform joint

  19. Lapidus Bunion Correction

  20. Modified Lapidus

  21. Modified Lapidus Procedure (Retrospective Chart Review)

  22. Purpose of the Study • To determine if the absence of the lateral release(step #2) obtain correction in comparison with the true lapidus procedure • All results were based on the following: • Intermetatarsal angle • Hallux abductus angle • Metatasal protrusion distance • Sesamoid position

  23. Methods and Materials • A retrospective Chart review of 100 patients that underwent modified Lapidus bunionectomy procedure from 2002 to 2007 • Inclusion criteria-healthy patients, no previous surgical intervention • Exclusion criteris-previous surgical intervention, previous infections, decrease in bone density

  24. Materials and Methods • Age varied between all the patients • Pre op xrays were taken which assessed the 1st intermetatarsal angle, met protrusion angle and the relationship of the hallux to the remaining metatarsals • F/u visits consisted of imaging to assess progression, alignment and sesamoid position

  25. Material and Methods • Patients were seen 3, 6, and 12months • Measurements of angles were also used to determine the amount of correction • Also we assessed the level of shortening that occurred with surgical correction

  26. Surgical Procedure • Resect medial eminence • Cartilage removed from base of 1st met • A wedge of bone was resected from medial cuneiform • Used a dril to create holes in bone to allow bleeding • Reduced w/ kwire • PF the metatarsal • Fixate with internal fixation • Remove kwire • Skin closure • Patient in supine position • Thigh tourniquet was used • Foot was prepped • Tourniquet set at 250mmHg • Dorsomedial 7cm incision over 1st met & metcuneiform joint • Dissection down to the level of bone avoiding neurovascular structures

  27. Physical Exam • Was used to assessment the level of pain if any or any complications • Complications included, infection, transfer lesions, or reoccurence, wound dehisence

  28. Results • Both IM and met protrusion angle were affected in all patients • Reduction in HAA in compared to pre op imaging • Some patients acquired more shortening than other patients • Reduction of the IM angle compared to pre op values • Two patients complained of severe pain following surgical procedure

  29. Results • No evidence of bone infection, transfer lesions or OA on radiographs • Little change in sesamoid positioning in comparison with pre op radiographs • Two pts were not seen for the 3month and 12 month f/u • Two patients were not seen for any f/u • 16 pts did not f/u for 12month visit

  30. Pre op IM angle was 17.45° Post op IM angles was 11.97° Pre op HAA was 16.1° Post op HAA was 13.9° Met protrusion pre & post op had shortening of the first met. Significant shortening post op Results

  31. Discussion • The purpose of this study was to evaluate the whether a good amount of correction was achieved once eliminating step #2(release of the ligament)in the Lapidus procedure • Results did show there was a reduction in the intermetarsal angle, with little change in the sesamoid position • Shortening did occur in some of the patients, however asymptomatic and patients returned to daily activities

  32. Discussion • Patients that did not f/u for visits were eventually removed from the study • In conclusion the modified Lapidus bunionectomy achieve similar results in correction of bunion deformity compared with the true Lapidus. • Has been reported that when fusing the metatarsal-cuneiform joint, the soft tissue in is no longer the deforming force. • Fusing the joint in its correct anatomical position • A great procedure for bunion correction

  33. All Done!!!!!!

More Related