RESUMO
Twenty-four patients who had arthrodesis of one or both ankles for leprotic neuroarthropathy were followed for an average of nine years and five months. At operation, after the removal of cartilage, joint debris, and sclerotic bone, the ankle joint was transfixed with a Küntscher intramedullary nail, and staples or Kirschner wires were used to control rotation. Fusion of bone was obtained in nineteen (73 per cent) of the twenty-six ankles. Failure to obtain fusion was due to postoperative infection in four patients, deficiency of the site of arthrodesis in one patient, and refracture through the site of fusion in two patients. When arthrodesis was successful, additional neuroarthropathic destruction of the mid-tarsal joint was halted, and the preoperative clinical symptoms of dull pain, local warmth, swelling, and instability were relieved.
Assuntos
Articulação do Tornozelo/cirurgia , Artrodese , Artropatia Neurogênica/cirurgia , Hanseníase/complicações , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Articulação do Tornozelo/diagnóstico por imagem , Artrodese/métodos , Artropatia Neurogênica/diagnóstico por imagem , Artropatia Neurogênica/etiologia , Feminino , Seguimentos , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Complicações Pós-Operatórias , RadiografiaRESUMO
A radiographical screening study of 338 leprotic patients was performed. Clinically, according to a nerve score (NS) designed by us, 12.9% of 674 hands showed mild nerve palsy (NS 5 or 6), 75.9% moderate (NS 3 or 4), and 11.4% severe (NS less than 2). Twenty-nine hands of 26 patients (NS 4.2 on average) demonstrated abnormal changes of the wrist joint on radiographs. We classified them into four groups: (a) lunate collapse (four patients), (b) scaphoid nonunion (eight), (c) scaphoid cyst (three), and (d) trapezium OA (11). In the lunate collapse and the scaphoid nonunion groups, destructive and reconstructive changes as described by Eichenholtz were identified on plain film. These groups demonstrated remarkable instability of the stress and dynamic roentgenograms. In contrast, the scaphoid cyst and trapezium OA wrists showed neither fracture nor instability and fewer changes than the other two groups. We considered the destructive changes that had taken place in the lunate collapse and the scaphoid nonunion wrists to be neuroarthropathy due to long-standing nerve palsy.
Assuntos
Artropatia Neurogênica/etiologia , Hanseníase/complicações , Paralisia/complicações , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Artropatia Neurogênica/diagnóstico por imagem , Ossos do Carpo/diagnóstico por imagem , Ossos do Carpo/inervação , Feminino , Deformidades Adquiridas da Mão/diagnóstico por imagem , Deformidades Adquiridas da Mão/etiologia , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Paralisia/etiologia , RadiografiaRESUMO
Among 449 patients with leprosy, 40 had clinical and radiographic evidence of neuroarthropathy in 50 feet. These changes were classified into four types according to the joints first involved by major lesions: ankle (25 feet), midtarsal (15 feet), tarsometatarsal (7 feet) and subtalar (3 feet). The progression of joint destruction was different in each type, but despite the severe destructive changes seen in radiographs, the patients had relatively few complaints. The muscles innervated by the peroneal nerve were severely paralysed in ankle and midtarsal types and it seems that, over a long term, repeated trauma and/or abnormal stress may lead to these types of neuroarthropathy. Neuropathy was less severe in the tarsometatarsal type of joint degeneration; the pathogenesis in this type seemed to be mainly direct trauma to the forefoot.