The sagittal parameters: PT, SS, PI-LL, and LL may predict development of ALD in patients' post-lumbar fusion for degenerative disease. Decision-making aimed at correcting these parameters may decrease risk of developing ALD in this cohort. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
The study aim was to compare methods of anterior distal femoral hemiepiphysiodesis (ADFH) for treatment of fixed knee flexion deformities in ambulatory children with neuromuscular conditions and flexed knee gait. This is a retrospective review of 47 children (14 female, 33 male, age at surgery: 12.1 ± 2.7 years) who underwent ADFH between 2009 and 2016. Subjects were grouped by ADFH construct: one transphyseal screw (N = 11), two transphyseal screws (N = 28) or plates and screws (P/S group, N = 8). Clinical/radiographic variables were analyzed using paired t tests, χ
2 tests, multiple regression and analysis of covariance. Participants experienced significant reduction in knee flexion contractures (Δ12°, P < 0.006), with no difference among groups (P = 0.43). Postoperative knee pain was significantly more prevalent in the P/S group (5/8, 63%) than the 1-SCR group (0/11, 0%) and the 2-SCR group (2/28, 7%) (P = 0.002). ADFH results in significant reduction of knee flexion deformity and improved knee extension during gait. Plate and screw constructs, the 1 and 2 transphyseal screw techniques are equally effective, but plate and screw constructs may be associated with a higher risk of persistent postoperative knee pain.
Purpose Previous studies have established the safety and efficacy of tranexamic acid (TXA) in reducing blood loss after total joint arthroplasty and spinal fusion surgery; however, literature regarding the effectiveness of intraoperative TXA in children with cerebral palsy (CP) is limited. The aim of this study was to investigate the safety and efficacy of intraoperative TXA in reducing blood loss and transfusion requirements for children with CP undergoing a proximal femoral varus derotational osteotomy (VDRO). Methods This is a retrospective review of 258 children with CP who underwent VDRO performed at the author’s institution between 2004 and 2017. In all, 36 subjects underwent VDRO surgery with administration of intravenous TXA and 222 subjects underwent VDRO without administration of TXA. Outcome measures including blood loss, transfusion requirements and venous thromboembolic events were compared between groups using t-tests and chi-squared tests. Results No significant differences were seen in the rates of transfusion between groups for the entire hospitalization (TXA group: 11.1% versus No TXA group: 19.8%), intraoperatively (TXA: 2.8% versus No TXA: 9.0%) or postoperatively (TXA: 8.3% versus No TXA: 14.4%). Intraoperative estimated blood loss (TXA: 144.4 mL versus No TXA: 159.0 mL) and percentage blood loss (TXA: 8.9% versus No TXA: 9.2%) were similar between groups. No major thromboembolic complications events occurred in either group. Conclusion The use of TXA was not associated with thromboembolic complications in this series of children with CP undergoing VDRO surgery. Though there was a trend toward lower rates of intraoperative and postoperative blood transfusion with TXA use in these patients, the differences were not significant, possibly due to low estimated blood loss in both groups and sample size. Level of evidence III- retrospective comparative study
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.