2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.foot.2015.07.008
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Giant cell tumour 2nd metatarsal—Result with en-bloc excision and autologous fibular grafting

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The above findings show that the nonvascularized fibular graft is promising to serve as a remediation technique after failure of vascularized fibular flap, which contributes to the successful restoration segmental mandibular defects and facial contours of patients. In fact, some studies report that bone defects are reconstructed by the non-vascularized iliac bone grafts, and most of these bone defects are derived from limb bones such as the poor healing of scaphoid fracture [15], ankle joint [16], discontinuous femoral neck fracture [17], and defect due to giant cell tumor in distal radius [18]. On the other hand, Jeong Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The above findings show that the nonvascularized fibular graft is promising to serve as a remediation technique after failure of vascularized fibular flap, which contributes to the successful restoration segmental mandibular defects and facial contours of patients. In fact, some studies report that bone defects are reconstructed by the non-vascularized iliac bone grafts, and most of these bone defects are derived from limb bones such as the poor healing of scaphoid fracture [15], ankle joint [16], discontinuous femoral neck fracture [17], and defect due to giant cell tumor in distal radius [18]. On the other hand, Jeong Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of the bone defects reconstructed using NVFF transplantation are limb bones, such as poor healing of scaphoid fracture (9), ankle joint (10), discontinuous femoral neck fracture (11), and defect of giant cell tumor in distal radius (12). Jeong et al (10) successfully repaired one ankle joint with a 15 cm NVFF.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The most common locations for GCTs are the distal femur, proximal tibia, and distal radius. GCTs of the foot and ankle region are rare and have been reported to account for 1‐6% of all GCTs, with the majority of cases occurring in the talus, calcaneus, and distal tibia . GCTs in the foot and ankle region tend to occur at younger age, present more aggressively with more bone destruction, and have a higher rate of recurrence .…”
Section: Benign Lesionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…GCTs of the foot are usually more aggressive, and the reported rate of recurrence in the foot and ankle region is around 30‐50% . Due to the aggressive nature of these lesions and the higher recurrence rate, many authors have described more aggressive wide resection techniques with bone graft reconstruction with good success rates . Detailed description of these procedures is beyond the scope of this review.…”
Section: Benign Lesionsmentioning
confidence: 99%