Osteotomy

A surgical procedure that intentionally cuts a bone and realigns it to shift weight off a damaged area and preserve a native joint.

What the word means

Osteotomy comes from osteo (bone) and tome (a cutting). The surgeon deliberately cuts a bone, usually just above or below a joint, and realigns the pieces to change the angle and shift the weight-bearing load. The bone is then held in the new position with plates and screws until it heals. Unlike fusion or replacement, an osteotomy preserves the joint’s ability to move—it just redistributes the load.

The most common use: knee osteotomy

A high tibial osteotomy (HTO) is the classic application. When the inner (medial) compartment of the knee has arthritis but the outer (lateral) compartment is still healthy, the surgeon cuts the tibia (shinbone) just below the knee and angles it outward. This shifts weight off the damaged medial compartment onto the healthier lateral side. Done in a patient in their 40s or 50s with isolated compartment arthritis, an HTO can provide 10–15 years of pain relief and delay or prevent the need for knee replacement.

Other osteotomy applications

When osteotomy makes sense

Osteotomy is a middle path—more aggressive than conservative care but less final than replacement. It’s considered when:

Recovery and weight-bearing progression

An osteotomy is major surgery and requires careful healing. Weight-bearing is typically restricted for 6–12 weeks while the bone heals at the osteotomy site. Physical therapy focuses on restoring range of motion and strength. Most patients are back to normal activities by 4–6 months, though it may take a year to feel completely normal. The goal is to buy 10–20 years before replacement becomes necessary.

Related pages