There’s no guarantee. Although this is cosmetic limb lengthening, this is still medicine and complications happen. In the best hands. It’s the nature of the game. Even the best football / basketball /hockey/cricket team loses games sometimes. That’s just how it is.
what will increase your odds is to have a surgeon who knows what he’s doing , who will guarantee FOLLOWUP with Xrays, physical examination, and will perform careful troubleshooting of problems.
The last thing you want is a surgeon that dismisses problems because he is shunning complications.
Being committed to the process will also increase your odds . My most successful patients have been committed to daily Physical therapy for anywhere between 1.5 hours to 3 hours. That does not mean you need to be at the therapist’s clinic every day, but you
need to commit to stretching on your own, every day. For 4 to 6 months, your limb lengthening should be your priority.
You want to increase your odds? use a brace to stretch at night as well. Keep an additive device handy. Don’t believe sleazy marketing . Keep an assistive device handy.
I was talking to a Nuvasive (Precice/stryde manufacturer) engineer today as I periodically do. Even THEY don’t recommend ever getting rid of an assistive device during the whole lengthening period until at least 2 cortices of bone are fully healed. Be wary of sleazy marketing!!
If you guys only knew how often we see patients limp into our office after limb lengthening performed all over the world. There are mistakes i see surgeons make ALL the time , for which patients show up to my office of Janet Conway’s office:
1)Failure to release the iliotibial band for a femur lengthening will lead to SEVERE abduction contracture, subluxation of the knee, knee flexion contractures.
2) failure to use blocking screws in a tibia lengthening will lead to a flexion /valgus deformity
3) failure to fix the proximal tibio-fibular joint while lengthening will lead to premature consolidation of the fibula regenerate, fibular head pull down, and TERRIBLE knee flexion contractures!
4) failure to recess the gastrocnemius.—> equinus ans knee contractures
5) failure to release the common peroneal nerve when symptoms of peroneal nerve paralysis or neuritis appear (i do it prophylacticslly for all tibia lengthenings)
6) failure to do percutaneous fasciotomies of the anterior and lateral compartment increases the risk of compartment syndrome.
finally 7) , failure to use rotational markers during the initial surgery leads to rotational deformities, knee pain, hip pain. That’s a noob move!
hoever you pick , make sure your surgeon knows what they are doing. That’s what will increase the odds that you’ll recover as much lower extremity function as possible.
hope this helps
Dr. Michael J. Assayag, MD. FRCSC
Limb Lengthening and Reconstruction Surgeon
International Center for Limb Lengthening of Baltimore
http://www.heightrx.comhttps://www.limblength.org/conditions/short-stature/massayag@lifebridgehealth.org
@bonelengthening on Instagram