The proposed method offers a reasonable treatment option for acute total Achilles tendon rupture with a low number of complications. The rerupture rate and return to preinjury activities are comparable to open and percutaneous without endoscopic control procedures.
The authors studied 32 patients to delineate the reliability of well-defined but frequently extended indications to define the ideal patient who will benefit from convex growth arrest. Mean age at the time of convex growth arrest was 29 (range 6-72) months, and average follow-up was 40 (24-120) months. Mean Cobb angle was 55 degrees (31-105 degrees) before surgery and 50 degrees (13-107 degrees) at final follow-up. Thirteen patients (41%) had a true epiphysiodesis effect, while 15 (47%) had fusion and 4 (12%) had progression. The age at surgery, magnitude, length and location of the curve, presence of intraspinal anomaly, and presence of sagittal plane or rib deformity were investigated in terms of the outcome, but none of these parameters was found to have an effect on the outcome. In conclusion, convex growth arrest is a safe and effective method in the management of the young patients with congenital spinal deformities. It can be performed for the balanced and cosmetically acceptable deformities of patients younger than 5 years of age regardless of the type, length, magnitude, and location of the curve, the existence of associated rib fusion, or the presence of sagittal plane abnormality.
High-resolution sonography can identify and locate the postganglionic injury associated with the upper and middle trunks. The ability of sonography to evaluate pre- and the postganglionic injury associated with the lower trunk was quite limited. Sonography can be used as a complement to MR imaging; thus, the duration of the MR imaging examination and the need for sedation can be reduced by sonography.
Intra-articular HA injections after arthroscopic debridement provide additional short-term benefits, but this combination therapy should be justified by further controlled studies with longer follow-up and larger patient groups.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.