Hi guys in my ever ongoing research about LL I asked myself the question, when the procedure of LL does not alter your mechanical axis (assuming you didn't get butchered and the nail is placed properly etc.) are you still at risk for early arthritis due to increased pressure (or whatever) stemming from an abnormal ratio of the tibia/femur in and of itself?
My assumption is you start at let's say ~0.8 tibia/femur and do 8cm femur lengthening. Now your new ratio will be 0.7 or potentially even lower (like 0.6), a lot of people are afraid that this will cause aesthetic probems (bad proportions) but what is imo a million times more important is your health after this.
We know that if your mechanical axis drifts off, leading to unequal pressure on the knee joint, it definitely causes arthritis (which btw is a pretty terrible thing and should definitely be avoided, especially if you are younger than 60). However, does a femur lengthening of ~8cm, if done correctly, meaning no misalignement of the mechanical axis, in and of itself causes arthritis due to a lower tibia/femur ratio?
tldr, if you lengthen your femur for 8cm, do you have to do tibias as well to avoid arthritis or is arthritis only a problem if you get a mechanical axis misalignement?