%0 Case Reports %T Donor-Site Complication of Severe Valgus Ankle Deformity in an Adult With Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome Following Free Vascularized Fibular Grafting. %A Lipari ML %A Laxson SE %J Cureus %V 15 %N 7 %D 2023 Jul %M 37621815 暂无%R 10.7759/cureus.42397 %X Valgus deformity of the ankle joint is a well-known and relatively common donor-site complication of free vascularized fibular graft harvest in children. Due to children having naturally greater ligamentous laxity than adults, the tibiofibular syndesmosis can be compromised with the loss of the fibular shaft, leading to valgus ankle deformity (VAD). Syndesmotic stabilization with screws is commonly recommended in subsets of pediatric patients at the greatest risk of this complication. In adults, the occurrence of VAD is seldom reported in the literature following fibular graft harvest. As such, no recommendation for syndesmotic stabilization exists in the adult population. We present a case of end-stage VAD in an adult patient with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) following free vascularized fibular graft harvest. We hypothesize that other patients with generalized joint hypermobility may face the same complication and, thus, recommend the consideration of syndesmotic stabilization or primary syndesmotic fusion at the time of graft harvest in this patient population.