complications
Last reviewed 01/2018
Complications of the surgical correction of congenital syndactyly include:
- immediate or early:
- division of nerve or tendon eg if fused
- ischaemic digit eg digital artery damaged or digit swells with a tight graft
- haematoma
- infection
- graft loss due to shear, infection or haematoma
- late:
- deformity of digits or the web:
- contracture may occur in up to 50% of cases
- commonly either flexion or lateral deviation
- more rarely, rotation
- either due to scarring on the ipsilateral side to the deformity or a growth disturbance secondary to surgery
- particularly common with contracture secondary to split thickness skin grafts as opposed to full thickness skin grafts
- unaesthetic appearance:
- hair growth on graft in around 10% of all cases
- nail growth abnormality
- abnormal pigmentation of, for example, groin skin graft relative to surrounding skin; occurs in approximately 5% of all cases
- "web creep":
- advancement of the new web space margin distally down the digits with time
- around 20% of cases develop
- may be due to scar contracture or relative growth of soft tissue within the web
- deformity of digits or the web:
Deformity and web creep are the main reasons for re-operation which may be necessary in up to 50% of cases.