Abstract
Various techniques have been described for first metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joint arthrodesis. The purpose of this study was to determine if cup and cone preparation by a single surgeon with an interfragmentary screw and dorsal plate fixation provides a comparable union rate in hallux valgus versus hallux rigidus. Our study included all patients who underwent first MTP joint fusions using cup and cone preparation with an interfragmentary compression screw and dorsal plate fixation from 2010 to 2015. We compared union rates in 65 patients with hallux rigidus with 47 who had hallux valgus. One of 65 hallux rigidus cases developed non-union and underwent revision surgery. One of 47 patients in the hallux valgus group developed a painless non-union. All other patients achieved union based on post operative radiographs. Our rate of painful non-union was 1.5% for hallux rigidus and 0% for hallux valgus, which is lower than recent published literature of 7% for hallux valgus and 3.7% for hallux rigidus. We found no difference between the two groups suggesting this method may provide stronger fixation and may be preferable when dealing with hallux valgus. First metatarsophalangeal joint fusion in patients with severe hallux valgus and hallux rigidus, using spherical reamers, compression screw and dorsal plate fixation is equally successful at achieving clinical and radiographic fusion in both hallux valgus and hallux rigidus.
Highlights
Various techniques have been described for first metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joint arthrodesis
The purpose of this study was to determine if cup and cone preparation by a single surgeon with an interfragmentary screw and dorsal plate fixation provides a comparable union rate in hallux valgus versus hallux rigidus
We found no difference between the two groups suggesting this method may provide stronger fixation and may be preferable when dealing with hallux valgus
Summary
Various techniques have been described for first metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joint arthrodesis. The fixation methods include Kirschner wires, interfragmentary screws, a dorsal plate or a combination. All techniques give satisfactory results in the treatment for severe hallux valgus as well as hallux rigidus [1,2,3,4]. A review of the literature showed that nonunion following MTP joint arthrodesis for severe hallux valgus averaged 7%, almost double for hallux rigidus averaging 3.7% [5]. Biplanar cuts were used in all cases and either crossed screw fixation in the majority or a dorsal plate with or without a compression screw. It may be that the hallux valgus group needs a stronger construct to achieve comparable union rates to the hallux rigidus group [6]
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