In arthritis of the varus knee, a high tibial
osteotomy (HTO) redistributes load from the diseased medial compartment
to the unaffected lateral compartment. We report the outcome of 36 patients (33 men and three women)
with 42 varus, arthritic knees who underwent HTO and dynamic correction
using a
The June 2013 Wrist &
Hand Roundup360 looks at: whether size is a limitation; cancellous bone grafting in scaphoid nonunion; the Kienböck’s dichotomy; late displacement of the distal radius; flexor slide for finger contracture; aesthetic syndactyly; flexor tendon repair; and fixation of trapeziometacarpal cups.
Introduction: The Staffordshire Orthopaedic Reduction Machine (STORM) was developed to assist in the reduction of tibial shaft fractures prior to the application of an external fixator. Its use has now been extended to fractures of the tibial plateau and plafond, where it has been utilised to gain and hold a good reduction prior to the application of various internal and external fixation techniques. Methods: The STORM was used sterile within the operative field on a standard radiolucent operating table. It was applied with two tensioned 2 mm wires: the distal through the calcaneum; the proximal through the proximal tibia for shaft and pilon fractures, and through the distal femur for plateau fractures. Controlled traction was applied through these two wires. Torsion was independently corrected and locked. Translation and angulation was corrected using two translation arms each applied to the tibia with a single unicortical screw. The STORM was removed at the end of each operation. Results: The STORM was used in 241 cases. Pilon (n=42): bridging hinge 23 (t [mean operation time in minutes]=102.9), percutaneous plate 10 (t=131.4), ring fixator 5 (t=140), screws and fibula plate 3 (t=77), other 2. Plateau (n=23): ring fixator 11 (t=129.7), LISS plate 8 (t=98.6 mins), monolateral