Is percutaneous medial hamstring myofascial lengthening as anatomically effective and safe as the open procedure

2017 
Abstract Background Medial hamstring fractional lengthening is commonly performed in children with cerebral palsy (CP) to decrease contracture and/or to improve gait. Percutaneous procedures are gaining more and more popularity, even in the paediatric population, with equivocal results. The purpose of this paper was to determine the efficacy and safety of percutaneous medial hamstring myofascial lengthening (PHL). Methods This is a prospective randomised controlled trial including 31 knees from 18 consecutive patients with CP scheduled for medial hamstring lengthening in the setting of multilevel tendon lengthening procedures in a university hospital. Other concomitant lower extremity surgeries were not exclusionary. A first paediatric orthopaedic surgeon executes the PHL at one level, as recently described in the literature. Another surgeon opens and extends the wound to explore what had been cut during the PHL and completes fractional lengthening (OHL) of both the semimembranosus (SM) and semitendinosus...
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