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| Genu Valgum - Dysplasia
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| J.A. is a four-and-a-half year
old girl who presented with progressive and painful knock knee deformities.
She has a bone growth disorder called spondylometaphyseal dysplasia
contributing to her genu valgum. While the growth plates (physes)
are weakened by this condition, the displacement of gravity beyond
the confines of the knee tends to accelerate the damage and limits
her vertical growth. |
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| The mechanical axis (or center of gravity)
is represented by a dotted line drawn from the center of the hip
to the center of the ankle. Normally this should bisect the knee.
That would provide balance of forces across the knee and spare the
adjacent ligaments from undue stress. However, in her condition,
the mechanical axis, and thus the forces of gravity, are lateral
to the knee. This pulls the patella outward, causing knee pain.
The unbalanced forces cause ligament stress and inhibit the growth
of the outer portion of both the femur and the tibia. Left untreated,
the natural history is one of progressive deformity, awkward gait,
and knee pain. |
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| Using the guided growth technique with the
eight-Plate, the bones were never cut, neurovascular risk was avoided,
instability was avoided, and there was no healing interval. Correction
occured gradually through growth. As growth occured, the screws
were free to diverge but the plate resisted longitudinal expansion
on the instrumented side of the growth plate. |
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| Through guided growth, the deformities correct
gradually and safely over a period of eleven months following eight-Plate
application. There is no cast and immediate mobilization is permitted.
The mechanical axis is successfully restored to neutral whereupon
the pain resolves and the gait pattern normalizes. The ligaments,
cartilage and physes are alleviated of the harmful effects of eccentric
loading. The plates are then removed; subsequent growth will be
monitored. In the event that deformity reoccurs, the plating procedure
may be safely repeated. |
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| Through understanding and patience, even
complex deformities may be gradually and safely corrected through
redirecting the physis without the risks and problems associated
with traditional methods requiring osteotomy and immobilization.
This minimally invasive and biologically sound technique represents
a powerful new tool in the orthopedic armamentarium. |
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| eight-Plate is applicable to virtually any
angular deformity of any etiology, in any size child, providing
the physis has not closed. Patient and parent acceptance is uniformly
enthusiastic compared to other available techniques. |
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