Non-union of the tibia associated with infection was treated with
radical resection of the necrotic bone and distraction osteogenesis in
twenty-eight patients who were eighteen to seventy-four years old.
Non-union, infection, shortening, deformity, and osteoporosis were all
addressed simultaneously. All patients had either one-segment or
two-segment lengthening of bone with a technique of bone transport in which
a bone fragment is moved toward the site of non-union, leaving a defect
that is bridged by distraction osteogenesis. The size of the bone defect
that was bridged averaged six centimeters (range, two to thirteen
centimeters). The infection was eradicated in all patients before the
fixator was removed. The mean duration of treatment was ten months. The
mean time to union, calculated from the day that the intercalary segment
came into contact with the target segment, was six months. The mean
duration of follow-up was thirty-nine months. The deformity and the
inequality of the lengths of the legs were corrected successfully--to less
than 7 degrees and to less than 2.5 centimeters, respectively--in fourteen
of the twenty-eight patients. In these fourteen patients, the bone
result--determined according to the criteria of union, healing of the
infection, status of the deformity, and amount of residual shortening--was
considered excellent. Of the fourteen remaining patients, eight had a good
bone result; one, a fair result; and five, a poor result. The functional
result was excellent in seven patients, good in eleven, fair in four, and
poor in five. One patient had an amputation. Three patients (11 per cent)
had a problem with union that was treated with augmentation with a bone
graft. One patient, who had sustained a refracture, had an amputation.
Twenty-five patients (89 per cent) had a total of seventy-one minor or
major complications, a rate of 2.5 complications per patient.