A Novel Minimally Invasive Surgical Technique for Eight-Plate Hemiepiphysiodesis: Description and Evaluation
Stephan Heisinger, Johannes Sommeregger, Carmen Trost, Madeleine Willegger, Markus Schreiner, Reinhard Windhager, Alexander Kolb

TL;DR
A new minimally invasive surgery for correcting leg alignment in children was found to be as effective as traditional methods but with smaller scars.
Contribution
A novel minimally invasive surgical technique for eight-plate hemiepiphysiodesis was introduced and evaluated.
Findings
The minimally invasive procedure significantly reduced skin incision length compared to conventional surgery.
No significant differences were found in surgery duration, revision rate, or correction outcomes between the two methods.
The new technique is as effective and safe as the conventional approach for treating limb malalignment.
Abstract
Background: Temporary hemiepiphysiodesis with tension band plates or eight-plates is a common surgical procedure to treat malalignment of the lower limb axis in skeletally immature patients. The objective of this study was to compare a new minimally invasive surgical procedure with the conventional procedure and evaluate its safety and effectiveness in order to reduce the risk of hypertrophic scarring, which may cause functional impairment as well as cosmetic issues. Methods: Sixty-five growth plates of either the femur or the tibia were evaluated in 33 patients treated for genu valgum or varum between 2010 and 2017. Each growth plate was considered an individual case. The modified procedure was used in 17 cases and the conventional procedure in 48 cases. The modified surgical procedure is characterized by an 8 mm incision and preparation of the epi-periosteal layer, in which the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHip disorders and treatments · Spine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology · Orthopedic Surgery and Rehabilitation
