Assessment of fibular regeneration after graft harvesting in patients with benign bone tumors: A retrospective study comparing different age groups - 12/06/22
Abstract |
Introduction |
Using non-vascularized fibula as autogenous graft has gained much success in reconstruction after tumor resection owing to its simplicity. Donor-site morbidity related to fibula deficiency includes valgus ankle, chronic pain and stress fractures of the ipsilateral tibia.
Hypothesis |
Growth potential before skeletal maturity is the most important factor promoting fibular regeneration after non- vascularized harvesting, and its decline with skeletal maturity causes failure of fibular regeneration.
Patients and Methods |
This is a retrospective study of the patients with benign bone tumors who required bone defect reconstruction by non-vascularized fibular graft utilizing a periosteal preserving technique. The study entailed 118 patients below the age of 12, 100 age 12–18, and 80 above the age of 18.
Results |
In children below 12, regeneration was complete in 95%, incomplete in 4.2% and partial in 0.8% of the cases. In adolescents, regeneration was complete in 72%, incomplete in 15% and partial in 13% of the cases. After skeletal maturity, no regeneration occurred in 92.5%of the patients, while partial regeneration occurred in 7.5% of the cases. Valgus ankle occurred in 2.8% of the cases before skeletal maturity, and none in older patients.
Discussion |
Complete regeneration after non-vascularized fibula graft harvesting is the rule in pediatric patients and to a lesser extent in adolescent group. This is usually associated by near normal regaining of the regenerate strength and function. Non-regeneration dominates in older age group. The length of the harvested segment has no impact on the regeneration or the remodeling process.
Level of evidence |
IV; case series, retrospective comparative study.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Non-vascularized fibula, Regeneration, Graft
Plan
Vol 108 - N° 4
Article 103108- juin 2022 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.