I just finished reading a few of the cases that people have attacked Betz or Guichet over in this forum. One of Betz's very bad cases was a nonunion due to infection that reportedly was not identified or treated correctly. The other bad cases for each I have seen have all been simple nonunions.
We know obviously nonunion is the greatest risk for these mechanical nails because they cannot close back down if you open them too fast.
The question I have is: Why can't this risk of nonunion be controlled with slower distraction?
I read on either Guichet's or Betz's website (not sure which one) that from their perspective one of the advantages of their nails is because the ratcheting is predictable, you only need x-rays once a month. They say you need fewer x-rays because you can measure the progress by clicks, not by x-ray. But to me this would be insane. If you were only getting monthly x-rays and distracting at 1 mm/day, you would only be getting an x-ray every 3 cm of distraction. If you do not have callus forming in that gap even just that gap could cripple you and ruin the procedure if you do it too fast.
My inclination would be:
- Distract 1 cm at a time.
- Every 1 cm, get an x-ray.
- If the x-ray shows inadequate callus in the gap, do not proceed further.
- Use PEMF/LIPUS to stimulate constantly and until the gap starts to fill.
- Repeat until done.
A 1 cm gap should fill almost universally for anyone (if it won't there is something medically wrong with you and no LL will likely work). But if you create a 5-10 cm gap with nothing bridging it or go so quickly the tissue can't maintain a connection, obviously you will then be totally fked.
The only challenge I would imagine with that protocol is you might risk premature consolidation and not be able to ratchet further. Also I have seen pictures where sometimes the outside/inside aspect consolidates or develops callus faster than the other - in those cases it would be hard to know if you should keep going or waiting. You need bridging all around to be safe but if one side hardens you won't be able to ratchet.
Premature consolidation is a much lower risk than nonunion. You can always go back in the OR to get it rebroken. You can do that a dozen times and it's no big deal (as long as no infection is introduced during the rebreak). On the other hand, a nonunion can ruin your life. So watching closely, going slower, and risking premature consolidation seems far better than risking nonunion.
What do you think is actually happening in these cases? Are people just distracting way too quickly/far and not checking the x-rays?
In most LL aren't the surgeons checking for callus every 1-2 weeks to give you the okay to go further or slow down (or stop)? Or are people blasting ahead blindly for 8 cm like a runaway train with no x-rays or nothing showing on the x-rays and then surprised when there is no bone in the gap at the end?
Thanks for any thoughts.