Surgery
James decided to proceed with the first stage of the procedure: HTO/MF. On December 4th he underwent successful HTO with an Orthofix external fixater and microfracture.
At surgery he had a large area of bare bone with no cartilage coating whatever. Microfracture was performed here to allow pluripotential marrow cells to coat the bone and grow into a new cartilage coating.
In the first two postoperative weeks his varus deformity was gradually and painlessly corrected using the orthofix external fixeter. He showed gradual post operative improvement. By August of 2003, eight months after surgery, he felt he was about 60% improved compared to before the surgery. He was, however, troubled by continuing feelings of instability, for example mowing the lawn.
By September his pain had continued to diminish such that he was more active than he had been before the surgery. This increased activity however only served to make his knee instability more bothersome to him and was now his chief limiting factor.
He therefore decided to proceed with Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction (ACLR). In October of 2003 he underwent successful quadruple hamstring ACLR. At that time his microfracture was viewed arthroscopically and showed successful restoration of a fibrocartilage layer in the areas where he formerly had had exposed bone. Postoperatively he did well. The procedure allowed a “second look” to evaluate the success off the microfracture in restoring healthy cartilage in conjunction with the HTO.
Radiographs showed his medial joint space to have increased in size as a result of the HTO/MF indicating growth of new cartilage. His instability had stopped since the ACLR. His pain was also much less than before the surgeries and in April he commented to me “I should have had the surgery done years ago”. However, he still did have some pain. This was of concern to him because of the physical nature of his profession and also because it indicated possible continued advancement of his arthritis. He therefore decided to take the final step and proceed with MAT. The other procedures had clearly not aggravated his arthritis and had indeed resulted in definite functional and radiographic improvement.
We elected to proceed in June of 2004. This was six months after his ACLR and would allow his graft to have matured sufficiently that whatever stresses were applied at the time of MAT should not damage it.
His knee was measured and a size appropriate donor was found. In June of 2004 he underwent MAT. He initially had some aching and swelling. These persisted for several months and then gradually went away.