Fifty-one cases of moderate to severe bunion deformity with hallux valgus and metatarsus primus varus in 43 patients were treated by bunionectomy, proximal Chevron metatarsal osteotomy, lateral capsulotomy, adductor tenotomy, and lashing of first and second metatarsals together. The hallux valgus angle improved an average of 19 degrees from 33 degrees (mean) preoperatively to 14 degrees (mean) postoperatively. The intermetatarsal angle improved an average of 7.3 degrees from an average of 14 degrees preoperatively to an average of 6 degrees postoperatively. The position of the sesamoids was realigned to beneath the first metatarsal head and the metatarsal length remained essentially unchanged. Union occurred in 9 weeks (mean). No malunions occurred. Foot score profiles revealed a significant improvement in subjective evaluation from 69/100 preoperatively to 83/100 postoperatively with respect to pain, deformity, motion, disability, and cosmesis. Seventy-eight percent of patients had a good to excellent result. Improved subjective evaluations indicated that proximal Chevron osteotomy combined with bunionectomy, capsulotomy, tenotomy, and metatarsal lashing provides a reliable method with respect to stability, technical ease, low complication, and satisfactory surgical outcome for correction of moderate and severe bunion deformity, both as a primary and revision procedure.
Proximal chevron first metatarsal osteotomy with lateral capsulotomy, adductor tenotomy, and binding of the first and second metatarsals was reviewed in 88 consecutive cases. Seventy-two cases in 55 patients are reported, with an average clinical follow-up of 41 months. The hallux valgus angle improved an average of 15 degrees , from 32.0 degrees preoperatively to an average of 17.0 degrees postoperatively. The intermetatarsal I-II angle improved an average of 5.5 degrees, from 15.3 degrees preoperatively to 9.0 degrees postoperatively. The lateral plantar first metatarsal angle did not change. First metatarsal length was decreased by 2.0 mm. Union occurred at an average of 2 months. Sesamoid position improved 49%, from a preoperative average subluxation of 80% to a postoperative average subluxation of 29%. Subjective foot score profiles improved from a preoperative average of 70.1/100 to a postoperative average of 94.4/100 with respect to pain, deformity, motion, disability, and cosmesis. There were 10 patients with complications, including three patients with delayed unions, two with second metatarsal stress fractures, one with hallux varus, two with hallux limitus, one with progressive arthritis, one with cellulitis, and one with hallux elevatus. Eighty-four percent of the patients stated that they would undergo the procedure again without reservation, 9% would proceed with reservation, and 7% would not proceed with surgery again if offered. This technique provides reliable successful long-term results for the treatment of moderate and severe symptomatic bunion, hallux valgus, and metatarsus primus varus.
Open reduction and arthrodesis with use of multiple axially placed intramedullary screws for the surgical correction of neuropathic midfoot collapse provides a reliable stable construct to achieve and maintain correction of the deformity.
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.