Abstract

Category: Diabetes Introduction/Purpose: Charcot Foot is a complex neuro-arthropathy associated with acquired progressive deformity and a significant impact to patients’ quality of life. Recent reports have suggested that preoperative deformity is predictive of clinical outcomes following surgical correction of the acquired deformity associated with midtarsal diabetes-related Charcot Foot arthropathy. Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed of 56 patients who underwent surgical reconstruction of Charcot ankle arthropathy by a single surgeon over a 14-year time period. Preoperative tibiotalar alignment was reviewed in the coronal and sagittal plane. Preoperative patient characteristics including age, sex, hemoglobin A1c, BMI, insulin use, and presence of a wound or infection at the time of surgery were also recorded. Preoperative coronal plane deformity was observed as valgus 16/56 (28.6%), varus 31/56 (55.4%), and neutral 9/56 (16.1%). Surgery included debridement of active infection when present, corrective osteotomies, and an attempt at ankle arthrodesis with application of a ringed external fixator (39 of 56, 69.6%) when infection was present or retrograde intramedullary nail (17 of 56, 30.3%). Clinical outcomes of excellent, good, or poor were based on limb salvage, resolution of infection and chronic wounds, and the ability to ambulate with either a CROW, AFO, or therapeutic diabetic footwear. Results: The average total patient follow-up time from index surgery was 115.4 weeks. One patient died after 134.3 weeks of follow-up and 8 underwent amputation. The post-operative complication rate was 69.6% (39 of 56), 79.5% (31 of 39) of which underwent re-operation. Ultimately, only 25 of 55 patients (45.5%) achieved a favorable (excellent or good) clinical outcome. There was no meaningful association between surgical outcome, post-operative complication, reoperation, and amputation and patients’ pre-operative alignment, final alignment, treatment with either ex-fix or IMN, the presence of a wound or infection, age, HgA1c, or BMI. However, compared to insulin dependent diabetics, those not taking insulin were only 0.34 times as likely to have a poor outcome. Conclusion: Operative fixation of Charcot ankle arthropathy was performed with a goal of achieving a plantigrade post for ambulation void of infection or chronic wounds and easily accommodated with a supportive orthosis. This retrospective case series demonstrates a high complication rate in this complex patient population. Clinical outcomes of Charcot ankle can be used to counsel patients on the risks of surgical correction and as a benchmark for improved treatment strategies.

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