Abstract

The Afghan osteotomy was combined with external fixation on 19 patients (23 extremities) with late-onset tibia vara. The average weight was 258 lb and all patients weighed >95th percentile. The average preoperative deformity was 28.2 degrees. The average intraoperative correction was 27.6 degrees. Average healing time was 141 days. The mean follow-up was 2.7 years. Based on radiographic correction, at long-term follow-up, there were 15 excellent, two fair, and six poor results. The quality of the initial correction was the only significant variable, and it was borderline (p = 0.0587). Complications included loss of alignment, peroneal nerve palsy, superficial pin tract infection, deep infection, and fracture. This method offers a technically simple procedure with a relatively low complication rate. It allows early mobilization and provides the ability to manipulate the correction postoperatively. An excellent long-term outcome is predicated on achieving an acceptable initial correction as determined by intraoperative mechanical axis radiographs.

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