Below-knee amputation for charcot joint developing 40 years after spinal cord injury. Case report

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Abstract

A Charcot joint developed following a spinal cord injury in a patient who had sustained a fracture-dislocation of the 12th thoracic vertebra and a spinal cord injury in a cave-in accident in a coal mine 40 years previously, and had since been assisted in walking with the aid of a short leg brace and a cane. Recently, the patient developed Charcot joints of the right knee and ankle, and the right ankle joint also became infected with a refractory open wound necessitating a below-knee amputation. © 1994 International Medical Society of Paraplegia.

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Yoshimura, O., & Toyonaga, T. (1994). Below-knee amputation for charcot joint developing 40 years after spinal cord injury. Case report. Paraplegia, 32(1), 63–65. https://doi.org/10.1038/sc.1994.11

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