120 likes | 480 Views
Rationale for Primary Stemmed Talus Ankle Replacement. General consensus regarding increased rates of failure of the talar component compared to the tibial component.Kopp et al. 45% subsidence, 2/3 of which involved the talar componentSpirt et al. Inability to salvage an ankle replacement secondary to talar subsidenceKnecht et al. Expressed concern regarding the longevity of the talar component.
E N D
1. Preliminary Outcomes of Primary Stemmed Talus Ankle Replacement Ferras Zeni, M.D.
Sigvard Hansen, M.D.
2. Rationale for Primary Stemmed Talus Ankle Replacement General consensus regarding increased rates of failure of the talar component compared to the tibial component.
Kopp et al.
45% subsidence, 2/3 of which involved the talar component
Spirt et al.
Inability to salvage an ankle replacement secondary to talar subsidence
Knecht et al.
Expressed concern regarding the longevity of the talar component
3. Our Study Retrospective Review
37 patients
27 female: 10 male
21 right: 16 left
Minimum two year follow up
Etiology
Post-traumatic 60%
Rheumatoid arthritis 14%
CMT 11%
Other (polio, PTTI, primary OA) 15%
4. Indications
5. Operative Technique Template Talar body size (sizes 1-6)
Talar body can be augmented based on extent of bone loss
Stem length
6. Operative Technique Initial tibial and talar cuts identical to nonstemmed arthroplasty
Custom jig allows for accurate placement of the guide wire in both the sagital and axial planes
Guide wire is then overdrilled using cannulated ACL reamer
7. Stem Insertion
8. Complications 9/37 patients underwent reoperation (24%)
Two patients awaiting reoperation
No infections (one delayed wound healing)
One tibial component revision associated with intraoperative medial malleolar fracture
No talar component revisions
9. Most Common Reasons for Reoperation Malalignment
6/37 (16%)
5/6 patients had preoperative malalignment
Relative risk 3.6 (p=.25)
Syndesmotic nonunion
3/37 (8%)
Comparable to previously reported rates
10. Other Reasons for Reoperation
11. Factors Associated with Reoperation
12. Conclusion Eliminates complications relative to talar subsidence
24% reoperation rate
Malalignment is the most common reason for revision
Likely related to loss of the accommodative function of the subtalar joint
There is a trend towards reoperation in patients less than 55, post traumatic etiology and patients with preoperative malalignment, but this did not reach statistical significance.