If you search the site for "periosteum" there are only 5 hits that come up. Yet it is actually a critically important part of leg lengthening.
What is the periosteum? The periosteum is the connective tissue sheath that sits over top of your bone. It is the outer lining.
Why is it so important?
Preservation of periosteum as the main source of blood supply is critical [46,75–81]. Its disruption significantly decelerates bone formation [75,82]. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) and histomorphometrical studies showed that the periosteum produces up to five-fold more callus than bone marrow during lengthening [74,75,88,89]. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3364349/pdf/11832_2012_Article_391.pdfYes, that's right:
The periosteum (outer sheath of the bone) is making 5 times more callus than the bone itself during distraction. ~83% of your callus production comes from the periosteum. Only 17% comes from the bone.
They mention in that article early attempts at distraction in the 1920s failed because the surgeons completely severed the periosteum. Without the periosteum, there can be no bone healing from distraction.
One of the 5 hits that comes up when you search "periosteum" on this site is from an interview with Dr. Guichet where he states similarly:
"The periosteum is the element in a lengthening with a nail which is the only component from which bone is formed. So you need to preserve it, but if you cut it, your healing again will decrease strongly."He talks about three methods for then breaking the femur and their pros and cons.
1) Osteoclasis - Breaking the bone manually without cutting. ie. Karate chop. In theory he says this is ideal which would make sense. If you do not cut the bone you will not need to cut through the periosteum. With a perfectly in tact periosteum, you should have rapid healing.
2) Cutting the bone with an intramedullary saw - Ie. Cutting the bone from the inside out when you are reaming. He says you can go 80% of the way from the inside out and then finish the job another way, ie. with karate chop (so as to still not cut the periosteum).
3) Standard osteotomy - Cut from outside to inside - This will inevitably cut holes in the periosteum leaking growth factors out into the surrounding tissue, blocking callus formation, and slowing or impairing healing.
He says:
"Opening a surgical site to the bone is aggressive and looses the bone healing progenitors. That is why I developed a specific intramedullary saw to preserve the healing hematoma. And that is in part why my patients heal so fast. Opening creates additional scars that patients do not like when they do cosmetic lengthening."
"Completing a fracture with hand maneuver (Karate Chop or whatever you call such a maneuver, as there are several technique for it) is obviously the best. It is called ‘osteoclasis’. It is generally performed on small bones, in children because it is easier to control through the skin without opening. "
"So, if you wish to preserve the fracture hematoma, you’d better not open the fracture site."The interview with Dr. Guichet is here:
http://www.limblengtheningforum.com/index.php?topic=383.msg6514#msg6514There apparently used to be videos of him there doing the karate chop which would have been interesting to see. According to that Paley uses a more traditional osteotome (chisel) to break the bone. Probably if he does wound the periosteum that way it's mild and he feels he can get away with it.
If you are talking to a surgeon about leg lengthening, one probably important question to ask them is:
How do you go about protecting and preserving the periosteum? What types of cuts do you make through it during osteotomy?Hopefully they have thought through their method and have a good one in place.