Medial transfer of the tibial Tuberosity remains the treatment of choice for skeletally mature patients with patellar malalignment (recurrent dislocation, subluxation with or without patellar tilt). As many patients with patellar malalignment have patellar articular cartilage lesion or patella alta, anteriorisation and distalisation of the tibial tuberosity is advised.
All operations were done either by selective epidural anesthesia (only sensory and not motor) or general anesthesia without muscle relaxant using quadriceps muscle stimulation. The mean tibial tuberosity medialisation, anteriorisation and distalisation was 1.4 cm (0–2.5 cm) 0.4cm (0–1.1cm) and 0.87cm (0–1.2cm) respectively.
84% of the patients stated they would have the operation again. All patients had full active range of motion on both knees without extension lag. At the final evaluation visit the Lisholm and Karlsson scores were good and excellent in 72% and 72.5%, 18.8% and 23.5% had fair results and only 8.7% and 4.4% had poor results respectively. The poor results correlated well with the degree of the patella cartilage damage found during surgery, poor selection of patients and extreme ligamentous laxity. There were two complications: one non-union of the tibial tuberosity treated successfully with bone grafting and one non displaced fracture bellow the osteotomy, treated conservatively. Both had excellent results.
We describe our experience of 79 patients with complaints consistent with MP, treated, by the senior author, over a 13-year period.
Initial management consisted of anti inflammatory agents, rest and redaction of aggravating factors. Diagnostic nerve block test was carried out for those who were refractory to the above treatment. All patients who responded to the local anesthetic test were treated with local infiltration of corticosteroids. Surgical intervention was reserved for patients who responded to the lidociane test but were refractory to repeated corticosteroids injections. Patients who failed to respond to the test injection were evaluated by CT-scan of the lumbar spine and by abdominal ultrasound (for female patients only). Follow-up ranged 1–13 years.
In forty-two out of 52 patients (81%) who responded to the nerve block test and received treatment with corticosteroid injections, Long-lasting relief was obtained. Three patients refractory to repeated injections of corticosteroid underwent surgery (neurolysis in one patient and nerve resection in two). CT-scan of the lumbar spine revealed significant spinal stenosis and nerve root compression at the level of L1–3 in 3 out of 6 patients.