Background/Aims: A 50-year-old type 2 diabetic male with a comminuted fracture of the tibia and delayed union after insufficient initial osteosynthesis with a resulting pseudoarthrosis was treated operatively by using a graft composed of platelet gel mixed with autologous cancellous bone. The essential idea of this therapy was to combine the healing capacities of platelet-derived growth factors and osteogenic stem cells and the modeling capacity of the gel. Due to a history of diabetes, allogeneic instead of autologous platelets were used. Methods: The allogeneic platelet concentrate was ABO- and RhD-matched, leukocyte-depleted, irradiated and activated by human thrombin. The defect of 45 ml was filled with the graft mixture and fixed with an external fixator. Results: Postoperative care was uneventful. After 6 months the graft was incorporated, the bone defect was fully bridged and full weight-bearing capacity was achieved. No side effects were observed and no platelet or HLA class I antibodies were detected. Conclusion: This case report shows that the clinical use of allogeneic platelet-derived growth factors is feasible and that a prospective study is necessary to prove the effectiveness and reproducibility of this therapeutic approach.
IntroductionTotal extrusion and loss of the talus is a rare injury with a wide choice of appropriate treatment, but rarely resulting in a fully functional recovery. We report on an uncommon case, both for the severity of the injury and for the uncommon treatment due to the patient’s rejection of secondary surgery.Case presentationWe treated a 16-year-old Caucasian man with the most extreme variant of a totally extruded and lost talus, accompanied with complex injury of the soft tissues of the ankle and foot. The treatment included urgent microvascular foot reimplantation, microvascular muscle free flap transfer, and temporary fixation. This kind of injury should typically be treated by tibiocalcaneal arthrodesis. However, this was not performed, as after the successful early stages of the treatment he strongly objected to another surgery due to his fully functional status and the successful therapeutic results of our early treatment.ConclusionsThe injury described in this case study would ordinarily be treated by amputation, but due to the well-executed treatment in the early stages after the injury, the outcome was satisfying. Surprisingly and against our expectations, the late results of the treatment were successful even without arthrodesis. He is now 37 years old and has a functional foot 21 years after the injury.
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.