# Gait Improvement After Distal Femoral Osteotomy for Permanent Patellar Dislocation Following Femoral Lengthening in an Adolescent With Achondroplasia: A Case Report

**Authors:** Shusuke Nojiri, Shinya Ishizuka, Yuki Fugane, Riku Arai, Chiaki Terai, Kenichi Mishima

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.82172 · 2025-04-13

## TL;DR

A teenager with achondroplasia improved his walking ability after surgery and rehabilitation for knee deformities caused by previous femoral lengthening.

## Contribution

Demonstrates effective gait improvement through distal femoral osteotomy and targeted rehabilitation in a rare skeletal dysplasia case.

## Key findings

- Walking speed increased from 0.60 m/s to over 1.0 m/s after surgery and rehabilitation.
- Lateral asymmetry and load patterns in gait were normalized following the intervention.
- The patient achieved independent walking without aids after nine weeks of rehabilitation.

## Abstract

In patients with skeletal dysplasia, certain disease-specific and treatment-related characteristics may affect functional outcomes following orthopedic surgery. We report a case of valgus deformity with permanent patella dislocation after femoral lengthening treated with distal femoral osteotomy (DFO), in which improvement in gait ability was achieved during the postoperative rehabilitation course. A 15-year-old Japanese boy with achondroplasia (ACH) had undergone tibial and femoral lengthening. During the femoral lengthening, valgus deformity and the accompanying permanent patella dislocation on both sides appeared; therefore, a staged bilateral knee osteotomy was scheduled. The preoperative status included a decreased walking speed of 0.68 m/s with a requirement for crutches. The surgery was performed bilaterally with a six-week interval and included DFO, lateral retinacular release, and medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) reconstruction. After a six-week non-weight-bearing period in each limb, the patient was able to walk independently with crutches; however, lateral asymmetry and lack of bimodal pattern, in addition to a decreased speed of 0.60 m/s, were noted by gait analysis. Additional rehabilitation programs, including gait training using real-time feedback of absolute load, were implemented to increase lower-limb loads and normalize the gait cycle. After a further nine weeks of inpatient rehabilitation, improvements in lateral asymmetry and load pattern were observed with a speed of >1.0 m/s without a walking aid. These results highlight that perioperative rehabilitation combined with DFO can effectively improve physical function in ACH patients with severe functional impairments and characteristic limb deformities.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** achondroplasia (MONDO:0007037)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (taxon 9606)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** limb deformities (MESH:D017880), patella dislocation (MESH:C538081), skeletal dysplasia (MESH:C535858), valgus deformity (MESH:D060906), ACH (MESH:D000130)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12072066/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12072066