With recent progress in cancer treatment, the number of advanced-age patients with spinal metastases has been increasing. It is important to clarify the influence of advanced age on outcomes following surgery for spinal metastases, especially with a focus on subjective health state values. We prospectively analyzed 101 patients with spinal metastases who underwent palliative surgery from 2013 to 2016. These patients were divided into two groups based on age (< 70 years and ≥ 70 years). The Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status (PS), Barthel index (BI), and EuroQol-5 dimension (EQ-5D) score were assessed at study enrolment and at one, three, and six months after surgery. The survival times and complications were also collected.Aims
Methods
The development of spinal deformity in children with underlying neurodisability can affect their ability to function and impact on their quality of life, as well as compromise provision of nursing care. Patients with neuromuscular spinal deformity are among the most challenging due to the number and complexity of medical comorbidities that increase the risk for severe intraoperative or postoperative complications. A multidisciplinary approach is mandatory at every stage to ensure that all nonoperative measures have been applied, and that the treatment goals have been clearly defined and agreed with the family. This will involve input from multiple specialities, including allied healthcare professionals, such as physiotherapists and wheelchair services. Surgery should be considered when there is significant impact on the patients’ quality of life, which is usually due to poor sitting balance, back or costo-pelvic pain, respiratory complications, or problems with self-care and feeding. Meticulous preoperative assessment is required, along with careful consideration of the nature of the deformity and the problems that it is causing. Surgery can achieve good curve correction and results in high levels of satisfaction from the patients and their caregivers. Modern modular posterior instrumentation systems allow an effective deformity correction. However, the risks of surgery remain high, and involvement of the family at all stages of decision-making is required in order to balance the risks and anticipated gains of the procedure, and to select those patients who can mostly benefit from spinal correction.
Brachymetatarsia is a rare deformity affecting the toes and leading to functional and psychological impact. The main aim of the study is to assess the efficacy of the surgical callus distraction technique in terms of length achievement in the paediatric group. Secondary objectives are functional improvement, reported complications and overall duration of treatment. For the series of cases involving all paediatric patients who had surgical correction at our unit from 2014 until the present, the electronic records were accessed to collect data. Pre-, peri- and post-operative assessments and investigations were used to evaluate patients' progress. The final plain films obtained were used to calculate the overall length achieved.Introduction
Materials and Methods
The intra-articular supracondylar fractures of the femur are difficult fractures that occur with increasing frequency in the last years. Their complex management is a source of controversy, since
The purpose of this study was to investigate the use of early post-operative bone scintigraphy to predict
Introduction: With the recent advancement, total ankle arthroplasty has been performed more frequently for painful end-stage ankle arthritis. However the indications of total ankle arthroplasty have yet to be determined. There is no clear consensus regarding the use of total ankle arthroplasty in end-stage arthritis with severe varus talar tilt. The present study evaluated the
Introduction: Pseudoarthrosis in Ankylosing spondylitis is often misdiagnosed as infection. It is a slow progressing lesion resulting in a kyphosis and slow onset weakness of the lower limbs. We are presenting our strategy and experience in treating 9 patients with such a lesion. Method: 9 patients age range from 40–55 years who presented with pseudoarthrosis of the ankylosed spine underwent back-front surgery during 2001–204. 6 patients had dorsal spine lesion, 2 had dorso-lumbar junctional lesion and 1 had cervico-dorsal junctional lesion. 8/9 patients had insidious onset with progressive weakness of both lower limb. 1 patient had an acute onset with deformity. 7/9 patients had neurodeficit (Frankel C) 1/9 had complete paraplegia. All patients underwent posterior kyphosis correction and decompression of the spinal cord. During posterior decompression 8/9 patients had an incidental dural tear due to adherence fractured lamina. The dura was repaired primarily or patch graft. 5/9 patients had single stage back and front surgery. The rest of the patients had staged surgery. The front surgery was excision of the tough fibrotic psuedoarthosis and reconstruction using strut graft/cage. Results: Average duration of surgery was 4 ½ hours (3 ½ to 6 hours). Blood loss was 800 ml (600–1300 ml). All patients required blood transfusion. Primary dural repair was done in 7/8 cases, patch graft in 3/8 cases, ceiling with fusion glue and fat graft in 1 patient. 5 patients who had less that 1000 ml blood loss during posterior surgery had same stage anterior reconstruction. Rest of the patient had 2 staged surgery. 4/9 patients had previous THR B/L. All patients showed rapid improvement in the neurological status and at 3 months follow up all were Frankel E. Conclusion: The
Introduction: Clavicle fractures represent 5% of fractures in adults and almost 44% of shoulder injuries and are usually treated none operatively with good results. However significantly displaced fractures can be associated with high non-union rate and there is a lack of consensus on when surgical treatment is indicated for such fractures. The aim of this study was to identify guidelines for surgical intervention, safer surgical approach and
Objective: The aim of this study was to delineate parents’ and professional caretakers’ satisfaction after spinal fusion in children with spasticity, and to determine differences in their perceptions. Study Design-Methods: A questionnaire assessing patients’ functional improvement after spinal arthrodesis for correcting scoliosis was addressed to 190 parents. An expanded questionnaire was also addressed to 122 educators and therapists working exclusively in the care of children with cerebral palsy. Results: The vast majority of parents and caregivers reported a very positive impact of the surgery on patients’ overall function, quality of life, and ease of care. Caretakers did not recognize effects of the scoliotic deformity on patients’ head control, hand use, and feeding ability. Parents had more appreciation of the benefits in the children’s appearance, while educators and therapists acknowledged more improvement in gross and oral motor function. Most parents (95.8%) and caretakers (84.3%) would recommend spinal surgery, considering that the benefits from scoliosis correction clearly outweigh the increased risk of surgical complications in this group of severely involved patients. Conclusions: Correction of spinal deformity in children with cerebral palsy is associated with a very high parents’ and caretakers’ satisfaction rate, with both groups reporting excellent improvement in appearance, comfort, ease of care, and some functional gains. The answers received during the survey demonstrated clearly that the vast majority of parents and caretakers consider the
Purpose of the study. To compare the effectiveness of unilateral and bilateral pedicle screw techniques in correcting adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Summary of Background Data. Pedicle screw constructs have been extensively used in the treatment of adolescent patients with idiopathic scoliosis. It has been suggested that greater implant density may achieve better deformity correction. However, this can increase the neurological risk related to pedicle screw placement, prolong surgical time and blood loss and result in higher instrumentation cost. Methods. We reviewed the medical notes and radiographs of 139 consecutive adolescent patients with idiopathic scoliosis (128 female-11 male, prospectively collected single surgeon's series). We measured the scoliosis, thoracic kyphosis (T5-T12), and lumbar lordosis (L1-L5) before and after surgery, as well as at minimum 2-year follow-up. SRS 22 data was available for all patients. Results. All patients underwent posterior spinal arthrodesis using pedicle screw constructs. Mean age at surgery was 14.5 years. We had 2 separate groups: in Group 1 (43 patients) correction was performed over 2 rods using bilateral segmental pedicle screws; in Group 2 (96 patients) correction was performed over 1 rod using unilateral segmental pedicle screws with the 2. nd. rod providing stability of the construct through 2-level screw fixation both proximal and distal. Group 1. Mean Cobb angle before surgery for upper thoracic curves was 37°. This was corrected by 71% to mean 11° (p<0.001). Mean Cobb angle before surgery for main thoracic curves was 65°. This was corrected by 71% to mean 20° (p<0.001). Mean Cobb angle before surgery for thoracolumbar/lumbar curves was 60°. This was corrected by 74% to mean 16° (p<0.001). No patient lost >2° correction at follow-up. Mean preoperative thoracic kyphosis was 24° and lumbar lordosis 52°. Mean postoperative thoracic kyphosis was 21° and lumbar lordosis 50° (p>0.05). Mean theatre time was 5.5 hours, hospital stay 8.2 days and intraoperative blood loss 0.6 blood volumes. Complications: 1 transient IOM loss/no neurological deficit; 1 deep wound infection leading to non-union and requiring revision surgery; 1 rod trimming due to prominent upper end. Mean preoperative SRS 22 score was 3.9; this improved to 4.5 at follow-up (p<0.001). Pain and self-image demonstrated significant improvement (p=0.001, p<0.001 respectively) with mean satisfaction rate 4.9. Group 2. Mean Cobb angle before surgery for upper thoracic curves was 42°. This was corrected by 52% to mean 20° (p<0.001). Mean Cobb angle before surgery for main thoracic curves was 62°. This was corrected by 70% to mean 19° (p<0.001). Mean Cobb angle before surgery for thoracolumbar/lumbar curves was 57°. This was corrected by 72% to mean 16° (p<0.001). No patient lost >2° correction at follow-up. Preoperative scoliosis size for all types of curves correlated with increased surgical time (r=0.6, 0.4). Mean preoperative thoracic kyphosis was 28° and lumbar lordosis 46°. Mean postoperative thoracic kyphosis was 25° and lumbar lordosis 45° (p>0.05). Mean theatre time was 4.2 hours, hospital stay 8.4 days and intraoperative blood loss 0.4 blood volumes. Complications: 1 deep and 1 superficial wound infections treated with debridement; 1 transient brachial plexus neurapraxia; 1 SMA syndrome. Mean preoperative SRS 22 score was 3.7; this improved to 4.5 at follow-up (p<0.001). Pain, function, self-image and mental health demonstrated significant improvement (p<0.001 for all parameters) with mean satisfaction rate 4.8. Comparison between groups showed no significant difference in regard to age at surgery, preoperative and postoperative scoliosis angle for main thoracic and thoracolumbar/lumbar curves, as well as SRS scores and length of hospital stay. Better correction of upper thoracic curves was achieved in Group 1 (p<0.05), but upper thoracic curves in Group 2 were statistically more severe before surgery (p<0.05). Increased surgical time and blood loss was recorded in Group 1 (p<0.05, p=0.05 respectively). The implant cost was reduced by mean 35% in Group 2 due to lesser number of pedicle screws. Conclusion. Unilateral and bilateral pedicle screw instrumentation has achieved excellent deformity correction in adolescent patients with idiopathic scoliosis, which was maintained at follow-up. This has been associated with high patient satisfaction and low complication rates. The unilateral technique using segmental pedicle screw correction has reduced surgical time, intraoperative blood loss and implant cost without compromising
Cam-type femoral acetabular impingement (FAI), is a common structural hip deformity and thought to be a leading cause of early hip osteoarthritis. Although patients who undergo surgical correction notice improved clinical function it is unclear what impact this has on the overall health of the cartilage. T1rho MRI cartilage mapping has been shown to be a reliable imaging technique to assess the proteoglycan (PG) content potentially serving as a biomarker. This study analyses post surgical changes in T1rho levels in hip joints treated with cam FAI. Eleven patients with a mean age of 38 (all males) underwent pre and post T1Rho Cartilage mapping of their hips at a mean time of 20 months post surgical intervention. The acetabulum was spatially divided into 4 main regions of interest (ROI), with levels of T1Rho in cartilage quantified as a whole and in each spatial segment. T1Rho signal is inversely correlated with level of PG content. All patients demonstrated loss of PG content on pre-op imaging with a T1Rho of 33.5ms+2.6ms. Preop T1rho levels were found to significantly correlated with the difference between pre-op and post-op T1rho in entire hip cartilage (R: 0.73; p=0.016). This correlation was reflected both in the anterolateral quadrant (R: 0.86; p=0.002), and in the posteriosuperior quadrant (R:0.70; p=0.035). Additionally, significant correlation was found between improvement of WOMAC pain score over time, and difference of T1rho values over time in the most lateral 3mm slice of the anterolateral quadrant (R: 0.81; p=0.045). Significant correlation was found between pre-op alpha angle at 1:30 and difference between pre-op and post-op total cartilage T1rho content (R: −065;p=0.038). T1Rho Cartilage mapping of the hip is a useful biomarker in the assessment of the surgical management of Cam type FAI. This preliminary data provides some evidence that surgical correction of the deformity can help minimise disease progression.
Patients due to have a major orthopaedic operation should be assessed in advance, in order to be fully prepared for the operation the scheduled day the without cancellations and be cost-effective. We studied 208 patients the last 2 years scheduled for hip and knee replacement. Mean Age 68.7. F=150, M=58. The patients were formally admitted in the assessment stay unit where a fully orthopaedic and anaesthetic examination was done and appropriate lab tests were carried out. The whole procedure lasted 4 hours and was charged 88 Euros. Only 37 patients have no medical problems. 98 suffered from hypertension and 10 of them needed further adjustment of their treatment. Out of 27 patients who had coronary artery disease, 12 referred to a cardiologist. All of the 12 patients with various heart problems needed further assessment. Readjustment of their treatment needed 3 out 15 diabetic patients. 1 out of the 8 patients with rheumatoid arthritis 1 needed reevaluation and 1 out 19 who suffered from various diseases 1 needed reassessment (Renal failure). Statistically 39 out of 208 had problems p<
0.001. The anaesthetic assessment contributes to 1.Reduction of cancellations due to medical reasons. 2. Effective use of the theatre time. 3. Reduction of cost.
Several orthopaedic studies have found significant correlation between pre-operative psychological status and post-operative outcomes. The majority of research has focused on patients requiring lower limb and spine surgery. Few studies have investigated the effect of psychological status on the outcome of upper limb operations. We prospectively investigated the association between pre-operative psychological status and early postoperative shoulder pain and function in patients requiring arthroscopic subacromial decompression (ASAD) for impingement syndrome. A consecutive series of patients in 2009/10 completed questionnaires 2 weeks pre-operatively and 3 and 6 weeks post-operatively that assessed psychological state, shoulder function and pain. The hospital anxiety and depression scale, the Oxford shoulder score and a pain visual analogue scale assessed psychological status, shoulder function and shoulder pain, respectively. Data was analysed using non-parametric statistical methods.Background
Methods
Obese patients show a higher incidence of tendon-related pathologies. These patients present a low inflammatory systemic environment and a higher mechanical demand which can affect the tendons. In addition, inflammation might have a role in the progression of the disease as well as in the healing process. A systematic review was performed by searching PubMed, Embase and Cochrane Library databases. Inclusion criteria were studies of any level of evidence published in peer-reviewed journals reporting clinical or preclinical results. Evaluated data were extracted and critically analysed. PRISMA guidelines were applied, and risk of bias was assessed, as well as the methodological quality of the included studies. We excluded all the articles with high risk of bias and/or low quality after the assessment. Due to the high heterogeneity present among the studies, a metanalysis could not be done. Thus, a descriptive analysis was performed. After applying the previously described criteria, thirty articles were included, assessed as medium or high quality. We analysed the data of 50865 subjects, 6096 of which were obese (BMI over 30 accordingly to the WHO criteria). The overall risk of re-tear after surgery is about the 10% more than normal BMI subjects. The rupture risk fluctuates in the studies without showing a significant trend. Obese subjects have a higher risk to develop tendinopathy and a worse outcome after surgery as confirmed in several human studies. The obesity influence on tendon structure and mechanical properties may rely on the fat tissue endocrine proprieties and on hormonal imbalance. Clinicians should consider obesity as a predisposing factor for the development of tendinopathies and for a higher risk of complications in patients who underwent surgical repair of tendons.
Aims. Tenosynovial giant cell tumour (TGCT) is a rare benign tumour of the musculoskeletal system. Surgical management is fraught with challenges due to high recurrence rates. The aim of this study was to describe surgical treatment and evaluate
Aim. People awaiting surgery for bone and joint infection may be recommended to stop smoking to improve anaesthetic and
Background. Ankle fractures associated with diabetes experience more complications following standard Open-Reduction-Internal-Fixation (ORIF) than those without diabetes. Augmented fixation strategies namely extended ORIF and hind-foot-nail (HFN) may offer better results, and early weightbearing in this group. The aim of this study was to define the population of patients with diabetes undergoing primary fixation for ankle fractures. Secondarily, to assess the utilisation of standard and augmented strategies and the effect of these choices on