First Tarsometatarsal Joint Arthrodesis for Hallux Valgus With and Without Intermetatarsal Screw Fixation: A Comparison of Correction and Maintenance of Correction

The Journal of Foot and Ankle Surgery(2022)

Cited 1|Views1
No score
Abstract
Tarsometatarsal joint arthrodesis is a commonly accepted procedure for hallux valgus associated with severe deformity and first ray hypermobility or medial column instability. This study evaluates the correction of hallux valgus deformity and the maintenance of correction with and without the use of a stabilization screw between the first and second metatarsal bases. Through retrospective review of first tarsometatarsal joint arthrodesis within our institution we evaluated 63 patients. Twenty-seven patients did not have a first to second metatarsal base screw and were placed into the no screw cohort. Thirty-six patients did have a first to second metatarsal base screw and were placed into the screw cohort. This study population had an osseous union rate of 95%. Clinical and radiographic recurrence occurred in 5 of 63 patients (8%). At 1-y postop the measurements demonstrated that the screw cohort had an average intermetatarsal angle correction of 11.6 degrees while the no screw cohort had an average correction of 7.8 degrees. Additionally, at 1-y postop the screw cohort had greater maintenance of the intermetatarsal angle correction with an average change of 0.5 degrees compared to 2.3 degrees in the no screw cohort. We conclude that the addition of the stabilization screw improves the first tarsometatarsal joint arthrodesis construct resulting in a greater degree of realignment and maintenance of correction.
More
Translated text
Key words
3
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined