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FLAT-OBLIQUE METATARSAL OSTEOTOMY (TRADE) AND VARIABLE ANGLE STAPLED PLATE FOR THE TREATMENT OF HALLUX VALGUS



Abstract

Purpose: We present a new basilar osteotomy we have called TRADE. This osteotomy uses a single flat-oblique cut to achieve lateral basimetatarsal translation with lowering and derotation.

Material: The ATLAS system was used. This system includes a four point axial staple for the phalanx and a staple plate for the metatarsus. The staple plaque was designed around the tibial osteotomy plates. It is composed of a straight plate screwed to the diaphysis. It carries two spikes at variable angles that penetrate the epiphysis perpendicularly. The desired angle is measured peroperatively and the plate is bent appropriately using a graduated template. Application of the staple plate then imposes the exact correction.

Method: We tested the basal osteotomy on five anatomic hallux valgus specimens, including one fresh specimen. We also reviewed 125 files of patients who underwent double flat-oblique osteotomy fixed with the system. Each type of hallux valgus was defined pre- and postoperatively, clinically and radiologically: four views, three to determine the orientation of the deformity in the three planes and a fourth one to assess reducibility. The operative technique involved four times. The first was often not necessary: lateral release, depending on the degree of retraction on the reduction view. The second time, the medial chevron osteotomy of the first phalanx, was almost always needed. The third time was the basimetatarsal ostetomy; the flat-oblique direction was determined from an abacus taking into account three variables: varus, rotation, lowering. The fourth time, exostosectomy with capsule retention, was not always needed. The patients experienced little pain postoperatively when the procedure was limited to the two osteotomies without affecting the soft tissues. For the 125 cases, intermetatarsal deviation was improved from 18°67 to 6°86, metatarsophalangeal angle from 33°59 to 11° and pronation from 13°42 to 0°72.

Conclusion: The TRADE osteotomy allows correction in all three planes. Correction is particularly precise in the frontal plane where the risk of undercorrection and recurrence is high. The procedure can be modulated according to the radiological presentation and can be limited to two osteotomies using short skin incisions without opening the joint.

The abstracts were prepared by Pr. Jean-Pierre Courpied (General Secretary). Correspondence should be addressed to him at SOFCOT, 56 rue Boissonade, 75014 Paris, France