Abstract

Ten male patients with previously infected bony defects involving both sides of an articulation underwent arthrodesis using a vascularized fibular transfer. The average age of these patients was 38 years (range, 20 to 60 years). The size of the bony defect averaged 9 cm (range, 3 to 21 cm). The ankle was involved in five patients, the knee in two patients, the wrist in two patients, and the elbow in one patient. Nine cases represented septic pseudarthroses (eight after trauma and one after attempted ankle arthrodesis). One patient had a defect across the wrist after debridement of a chronic infection. The patients were followed for an average of 71 months (range, 26 to 144 months). Nine patients healed after the index vascularized fibular transfer, and one patient (ankle arthrodesis) required a second cancellous bone-grafting procedure for delayed union at the junction of the fibula with the talus. Four of seven patients with lower limb involvement had residual leg length discrepancies averaging 5 cm (range, 3 to 8 cm), and one had a persistent 20-degree internal rotation deformity. Two of the patients with upper limb involvement had stiff digits. Five of the nine previously employed patients returned to their former occupation (including heavy labor in four cases). Complications included two wound separations, one case of instability of the donor ankle after removal of a large fibular graft (related in part to a prior injury), and one fracture at the junction of the fibular graft with the local bone 10 months after the index procedure, which united after plate fixation and application of autogenous cancellous bone graft. Arthrodesis using a transfer of vascularized fibular bone represents a viable option for limb salvage in the face of an infected transarticular bony defect.

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