cubitus varus by dhrumil patel

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Dhrumil Patel 3 rd Year Orthopaedic Resident CUBITUS VARUS

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Page 1: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

Dhrumil Patel3rd Year Orthopaedic Resident

CUBITUS VARUS

Page 2: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

Cubitus Varus

Forearm deviated inwards with respect to arm at elbow with resulting lateral angulation in full extension.

Reduction of physiological valgus

8 �-15 � ; Males : 10 �

Females : 15 �- 20 �

Page 3: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

Normally forearm is aligned in valgus with respect to arm in full extension with medial angulation.

Decrease in valgus with neutral alignment (loss of angulation) is called “Cubitus Rectus”. It is still a deformity as it deviates from the normal for population.

Page 4: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

CUBITUS VARUSVarus deformity at elbow (Cubitus Varus)

Page 5: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

Causes

1. Post traumatic malunited s/c humerus fracture (most common)

2. Congenital (progressive)

3. Malunited fracture lateral condyle (progressive if due to hyperemia and overgrowth)

4. Trochlear Osteonecrosis (static)

5. Malunited intercondylar fracture (static)

6. Malunited medial condyle fracture (static)

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Page 7: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

Types

Static (Non progressive) Progressive

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ON EXAMINATION

Inspection

•Hyperextension deformity

•Limited flexion

•Medial tilt and lateral angulation at elbow

•Prominence of lateral condyle humerus

•Wasting of muscles

•No scars/sinuses/redness

Page 9: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel
Page 10: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

PALPATION:

• No local warmth/tenderness

• Thickening and irregularity of

supracondylar ridges

• 3 point bony relationship maintained

• Medial epicondyle tip higher

Page 11: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

• Hyperextension at elbow

• No widening of intercondylar region

• Internal rotation deformity with increased

internal rotation ( Yamamoto test )

• Decreased external rotation which is

compensated by much more mobile shoulder

joint (so often goes unnoticed by

patients/relatives)

Page 12: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

DISPLACEMENTS THAT OCCUR AT ELBOW JOINT

•Medial displacement•Medial tilt•Internal rotation•Posterior displacement•Posterior tilt•Proximal migration

DISTAL FRAGMENT

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“Gun-stock Deformity” – Looks like a loading stock of old long barrel guns

Page 14: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

MEASUREMENTS ON XRAY :- AP VIEW

•Decrease in normal physiological valgus•Increase in Baumann’s Angle(Normal – 64 �to 81 �)

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•Metaphyseo-diaphyseal angle (Klebb-Sherman) Normally- 90 >Normal- Varus deformity <Normal- Valgus deformity

•Humero-Ulno angle (Oppenheim) Decreased Most accurate

Page 16: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel
Page 17: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

LATERAL VIEW•Normally no overlap

between the lateral

condylar epiphysis and

olecranon epiphysis

•If significant tilt of distal

fragment occurs, there is

overlap between the two

which appears like a

crescent → ‘Crescent Sign”

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CRESCENT SIGN

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TREATMENT :- 3 MODALITIES

1. Observation with expected remodeling2. Hemiepiphysiodesis and growth alteration3. Corrective osteotomy

Treatment is primarily “Cosmetic Correction”

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1. OBSERVATION•Generally not appropriate•Because, although hyperextension may remodel in a young child; in an older child, little remodeling occurs even in the plane of function of the joint

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2. HEMIEPIPHYSIODESIS•Hemiepiphysiodesis of distal humerus is rarely of value

•Only to prevent varus deformity with clear medial growth arrest or trochlear osteonecrosis

•If untreated, deformity will progress because of medial growth arrest and lateral overgrowth

•Lateral epiphysiodesis will not correct the deformity but will prevent it from increasing

Page 22: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel
Page 23: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

3. Corrective Osteotomy

Pre-requisites1. Atleast 1 year following fracture (Bone

remodeling and tissue equilibrium)2. Patient demanding surgery3. Calculation of wedge to be

removed→Normal side Xray→ Wedge angle = Varus + Normal

physiological Valgus (Metal wedge autoclaved)

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Page 25: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

3 Basic Types

Lateral closing wedge osteotomy Easiest Safest Most stable inherently Medial open wedge osteotomy with

bone graft Oblique osteotomy with derotation

Page 26: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

Lateral closing wedge osteotomy (Voss et al.)

Standard preparation, draping, tourniquet inflation

Lateral incision at elbow With fluoroscopic guidance,

insert 2 K-wires into lateral condyle just distal to the planned distal cut. Advance proximally after making wedge osteotomy closing laterally.

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Page 28: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

Keep medial cortex intact; weaken it by multiple drill holes and a Apply forceful valgus stress to complete the osteotomy .Close the osteotomy and advance the K-wires into the medial cortex of proximal fragment. Leave the wires buried under the skin. A third wire can be used if necessary for stability.

Close the wound in layers; splint the arm in 90 � flexion and full pronation.

Page 29: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

FRENCH OSTEOTOMY

•Posterior approach•Lateral closing wedge osteotomy with 2 guide pins and 2 screws inserted proximal and distal to the pins parallel to them.•Medial cortex broken•Only periosteum intact•Approximately the wedge till the 2 screws are parallel•Hold this position with TBW

Page 30: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

French Osteotomy Modified French Osteotomy

(Bellemore)

Post. Longitudinal approach

Detach whole of triceps

Ulnar nerve explored Medial cortex broken

Posterolateral approach

Lateral half of triceps detached

Ulnar nerve Not explored

Medial cortex intact so more stability

Page 31: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

STEP-CUT OSTEOTOMY(DEROSA & GRAZIANO)

•A modification of lateral closing wedge osteotomy

•Using a template constructed preoperatively, make a lateral closing wedge osteotomy in the metaphyseal region superior to the olecranon fossa.

•Make the osteotomy leaving a lateral spike of bone distally•Trim lateral portion of proximal fragment for close approximation.•Correct the medial tilt, rotational malalignment, hyperextension and fix with crossed K-wires•Then, use a lag screw from lateral portion of distal fragment to proximal fragment •Close the wound and apply posterior splint for 4 weeks.

Page 32: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel
Page 33: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

STEP-CUT TRANSLATION OSTEOTOMY WITH A Y-SHAPED HUMERAL PLATE

•Posterior approach to distal humerus.•Incise the capsule to expose medial and lateral condyles•Basic step-cut osteotomy involves osteotomy with a triangular template 0.5 cm proximal to olecranon fossa with base of triangle perpendicular to humeral shaft and apex directed proximally.•Remove wedge of bone.•In cubitus varus, rotate distal fragment so as to fix its lateral border into V-shaped apex of proximal fragment.

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Page 35: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

•In cubitus valgus, do fit the medial border of distal fragment into apex of proximal fragment leading to lateralization of the apex.•This basic step-cut translational osteotomy corrects deformity only in coronal plane.•Rotational deformity corrected in same operation by excising a piece of bone from posterior aspect of V-shaped proximal fragment. Correct rotation when angle of rotation differs by 10 �from normal.•Temporarily fix the correction by K-wires. Smoothen the sharp edges of medial and lateral columns.•Fix with 3.5mm plate with 5 screws distally and 2 screws proximally.

Page 36: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel
Page 37: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

OBLIQUE OSTEOTOMY WITH DEROTATION(AMSPACHER & MESSENBAUGH)

•Patient prone and pneumatic tourniquet in place.•Posterior elbow exposure through a longitudinal incision; divide triceps in line with its muscle fibres, expose the s/c part of humerus subperiosteally protecting the radial and ulnar nerves.•Oscillating saw used to make an oblique osteotomy about 3.8cm proximal to distal end of humerus directing it posteriorly above to anteriorly below. Complete it anteriorly with osteotome. Tilt and rotate the distal fragment until cubitus varus and internal rotation have been corrected.•With fragments in position, fix them with a screw inserted across the middle of osteotomy.•Arm is immobilized in a long arm cast or splint until union at 4-6 weeks.

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Page 39: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

DOME OSTEOTOMY WITH DEROTATION

(UCHIDA ET AL)

•A type of osteotomy with derotation • Preferred in mild cubitus varus•2 semicircular cuts made from lateral to medial•2 domes rotated and aligned to correct the deformity•Corrects lateral prominence of condyle

Page 40: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

MEDIAL OPEN WEDGE OSTEOTOMY WITH BONE GRAFTING

(KING & SECOR)

•Requires BG•Gains length→ inherent instability•May stretch the ulnar nerve- transferred anteriorly to avoid this

Page 41: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

COMPLICATIONS OF OSTEOTOMY

1. Stiffness2. Nerve injury3. Persistent deformity (under correction)4. Recurrent deformity5. Non-union6. Osteomyelitis7. Skin sloughing

Page 42: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

CUBITUS VALGUSIncreased physiological valgus with lateral tilt and medial angulation

Causes•Non-union fracture lateral condyle(>3months)•Malunited S/C fracture humerus•Osteonecrosis of lateral trochlea•Malunited intercondylar fracture•Radial head fracture dislocation•Medial epiphyseal injury and growth stimulation

Page 43: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

Pseudo Cubitus Varus

Lateral spur formation in lateral condyle humerus fracture due to elevation of periosteum and new bone formation leads to lateral bulge with normal carrying angle

Page 44: Cubitus varus by Dhrumil Patel

Thank You

Next topic: Non-union by Dr. Sagar