Severe heterotopic ossification (grade III and IV) after contemporary total hip arthroplasty (THA) requiring excision is very uncommon. We performed a systematic review of the literature, and report a new case series with operative treatment after primary uncemented THA. A systematic review identified papers describing patients who had excision of heterotopic ossification (HO) after contemporary THA, defined as performed after 1988. Concepts of hip arthroplasty, heterotopic ossification, and surgical excision were searched in MEDLINE, Embase, and Scopus, from database inception to November 2022. Inclusion criteria were: articles that included specific patient data on grade of heterotopic ossification, operative procedure, and prophylaxis. Studies were screened for inclusion by two independent reviewers. Extracted data included demographic data, interval from index surgery to excision, clinical results, and complications. One surgeon performed reoperation for
Introduction: The occurrence of bony
Detection of clinical situations are the most difficult for primary THA and factors which determine the complexity. Results of 2368 primary THA performed by one surgeon in 1923 patients with various hip pathologies from 2004 to 2016 were analyzed. The time of the surgery, the bloodloss, the features of the surgical technique, the implants used, and the incidence of complications and revisions were assessed and X-ray analysis was performed. Difficult cases of primary hip arthroplasty include severe dysplasia (types B2, C1, and C2 according to the Hartofilakidis classification), post-traumatic segmental acetabular defects and pelvic discontinuity, protrusio acetabuli, iatrogenic bone
Introduction: Described by Jacques Forrestier at the beginning of the 20th century, the disease was named ankylosing hyperostosis of the spine. 1. Since that time various other names have been accorded to it, the most comprehensive being dish: diffuse, idiopathic, skeletal, hyperostosis. 2. The disease is often misdiagnosed by radiologists, unrecognised by surgeons and considered a silent condition. To diffuse this myth of ‘innocence ‘ I am presenting syndromes collected from over 80 patients, during some 20 years. Methods: the clinical syndromes were recorded, with emphasis on general health and family history. The physical examination recorded the rigidity of spinal movements and neurological changes. All patients were exposed to plain films and CT scan of the spine, to barium meal and /or laryngoscopy. Results: Only clinical assessment and radiological illustrations were the aim of this review: Cervical syndromes: – painful
We retrospectively reviewed 54 patients (92 hips) who underwent cementless total hip arthroplasty for bony
Heterotopic Ossification (HO) is a known complication that can arise after total elbow arthroplasty (TEA). In most cases it is asymptomatic, however, in some patients it can limit range of motion and lead to poor outcomes. The objective of this review was to assess and report incidence, risk factors, prophylaxis, and management of HO after TEA. A systematic search was conducted using MEDLINE, EMBASE, and PubMed to retrieve all relevant studies evaluating occurrence of HO after TEA. The search was performed in duplicate and a quality assessment was performed of all included studies. A total of 1907 studies were retrieved of which 45 studies were included involving 2256 TEA patients. HO was radiographically present in 10% of patients and was symptomatic in 3%. Less than 1% of patients went on to surgical excision of HO, with outcomes following surgery reported as good or excellent as assessed by range of motion and Mayo Elbow Performance Scores (MEPS). TEA due to
Aim. In surgeries on patients with advanced ligament instabilities or severe bone defects modern-generation of rotating hinged knee prostheses are one of the main options. The objective of our study is to evaluate the mid-term functional results and complications of several surgeries using this form of prosthesis. Material and Method. The rotating hinged knee prosthesis (RHKP) was applied to 208 knees of 204 patients in primary surgeries between September 2009 and December 2017, the minimum followup was 15 months (mean, 65 months; range, 15–115 months). Of the total number of female patients there were 152 (74.5%), men − 52 (25.5%). The average age of the patients was 64,6 years (from 32 to 85). The main indications for using RHKP were severe varus deformity with flexion contracture in 107 knees (51,4%), severe valgus deformity (from 20 to 50 degrees) in 54 knees (26,0 %), severe ligamentous deficiencies in 24 knees (11,5%) and
Aims: The arthrodesis is a method of selection at a purulent destruction of a talocrural joint. By loss of motions the pain and the deformation are eliminated, capacity of a load of an extremities is restored. Methods: We allocate by experience of treatment 73 ill with a chronic infection of an ankle joint, which one executes in period with 1976 for 2002 an arthrodesis of a talocrural joint with applying of apparatus of external þxation. The external þxator consists of 2 rings on the anticnemion and 2 semirings on the foot. On the foot a pin was passed through talus, which provided maximum rigid of þxation and created conditions for early mobilization of a subtalar joint. At destruction of talus or distal metaphysis of a tibial is executed the autospongioid osteal plasty for 15 ill, which one has allowed to keep an axis of an extremity without shortening one. Results: The follow-up for 65 ill are studied in terms from 1 till 25 years. The osteal
Acute bilateral symmetrical pyogenic osteomyelitis in children is rare. The purpose of this paper is to increase awareness of the existence and severity of this condition. The clinical records and radiographs of eight children with acute bilateral symmetrical osteomyelitis seen between 1990 and 2003 were reviewed. All had typical clinical and laboratory features of acute osteomyelitis. The duration of symptoms ranged from 7 to 14 days. The age range was 5 to 12 years. The sites involved were the proximal femora in two patients, the distal femora in two, the proximal tibiae in two, the calcanei in one and the clavicle in one. All patients had fluctuant abscesses and underwent incision and drainage. Staphylococcus aureus was cultured in all cases and treated with cloxacillin for 6 weeks. Follow-up ranged from 18 months to 4 years. All except the patient with the clavicular lesion had poor outcomes. Patients with femoral neck involvement had avascular necrosis, pathological fractures and
Heterotopic ossification is the formation of lamellar bone in soft tissues and is a common complication of high-energy combat injury. This disabling condition can cause pain, joint
Revision total knee arthroplasty (rTKA) is a technically challenging and costly procedure. It is well-documented that primary TKA (pTKA) have better survivorship than rTKA; however, we were unable to identify any studies explicitly investigating previous rTKA as a risk factor for failure following rTKA. The purpose of this study is to compare the outcomes following rTKA between patients undergoing index rTKA and those who had been previously revised. This retrospective, observational study reviewed patients who underwent unilateral, aseptic rTKA at an academic orthopaedic speciality hospital between June 2011 and April 2020 with > one-year of follow-up. Patients were dichotomized based on whether this was their first revision procedure or not. Patient demographics, surgical factors, postoperative outcomes, and re-revision rates were compared between the groups.Aims
Methods
The aims of this study were to: 1) report on a cohort of skeletally mature patients with native hip and knee septic arthritis over a 14-year period; 2) to determine the rate of joint failure in patients who had experienced an episode of hip or knee septic arthritis; and 3) to assess the outcome following septic arthritis relative to the infecting organism, whether those patients infected by All microbiological samples from joint aspirations between March 2000 and December 2014 at our institution were reviewed in order to identify cases of culture-proven septic arthritis. Cases in children (aged < 16 years) and prosthetic joints were excluded. Data were abstracted on age at diagnosis, sex, joint affected (hip or knee), type of organisms isolated, cause of septic arthritis, comorbidities within the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), details of treatment, and outcome.Aims
Methods
Purpose of the study: The rate of intra and postoperative complications is generally high after surgery for neurogenic paraosteoarthropathy, also termed hetero-topic ossification. Material and methods: We present a series of 60 cases of osteoma involving the hip joint, analyzing complications in comparison with data in the literature. Results and discussion: Vascular complications (n=7): one required suture of the common femoral artery, three ligature of the deep femoral artery, two ligature of the deep femoral vein and one ligature of the collateral branches of the deep femoral vessels. Mean intraoperative blood loss was 1300 cc. None of the vascular complications gave rise to death or amputation. Early septic complications (n=4): three occurred after simple resection of the ossification and cured after surgical revision and antibiotics with no major impact on joint motion; one occurred after a procedure for resection of the ossification plus total hip arthroplasty and led to
Computer assisted total knee arthroplasty helps in accurate and reproducible implant positioning, bony alignment, and soft-tissue balancing which are important for the success of the procedure. In TKR, there are two surgical techniques one is measured resection in which bony landmarks are used to guide the bone cuts and the other is gap balancing which equal collateral ligament tension in flexion and extension is done before and as a guide to final bone cuts. Both these procedures have their own advantages and disadvantages. We retrospectively collected the data of 128 consecutive patients who underwent computer-assisted primary TKA using either a gap-balancing technique or measured resection technique. All the operations were performed by a single surgeon using computer navigation system available during a period between June 2016 to October 2016. Inclusion criteria were all patients requiring a primary TKA, male or female patients, and who have given informed consent for participation in the study. All patients requiring revision surgery of a previous implanted TKA or affected by active infection or malignancy, who presented hip
INTRODUCTION. Standing spinal alignment has been the center of focus recently, particularly in the setting of adult spinal deformity. Humans spend approximately half of their waking life in a seated position. While lumbopelvic sagittal alignment has been shown to adapt from standing to sitting posture, segmental vertebral alignment of the entire spine is not yet fully understood, nor are the effects of DEGEN or DEFORMITY. Segmental spinal alignment between sitting and standing, and the effects of degeneration and deformity were analyzed. METHODS. Segmental spinal alignment and lumbopelvic alignment (pelvic tilt (PT), pelvic incidence (PI), lumbar lordosis (LL), PI-LL, sacral slope) were analyzed. Lumbar spines were classified as NORMAL, DEGEN (at least one level of disc height loss >50%, facet arthropathy, or spondylolisthesis), or DEFORMITY (PI-LL mismatch>10°). Exclusion criteria included lumbar fusion/
Not all total hip arthroplasty cases are created equal is a maxim that holds true for both primary and revision scenarios. Complex cases involve patients presenting with compromised bone and/or soft tissue. For primary cases, these include hips with dysplasia,
Patients with longstanding hip fusion are predisposed to symptomatic degenerative changes of the lumbar spine, ipsilateral knee and contralateral hip. In such patients, conversion of hip arthrodesis to hip replacement can provide relief of such symptoms. However, this is a technically demanding procedure associated with higher complication and failure rates than routine total hip replacement. The aim of this study was to determine the early functional results and complications in patients undergoing hip fusion conversion to total hip replacement, performed or supervised by a single surgeon, using a standardised approach and uncemented implants. We hypothesised that a satisfactory functional improvement can be achieved in following conversion of hip fusion to hip replacement. Eighteen hip fusions were converted to total hip replacements. A constrained acetabular liner was used in 3 hips. Mean follow up was 5 years (2 to 15 years). Two (11%) hips failed, requiring revision surgery and two patients (11%) had injury to the peroneal nerve. Heterotopic ossification developed in 7 (39%) hips, in one case resulting in joint
Adult patients with history of childhood infection pose a surgical challenge for total hip arthroplasty (THA) due to distorted bony anatomy, soft-tissue contractures, risk of reinfection, and relatively younger age. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to determine clinical outcome, reinfection rate, and complications in patients with septic sequelae after THA. A retrospective analysis was conducted of 91 cementless THAs (57 male and 34 female) performed between 2008 and 2017 in patients who had history of hip infection during childhood. Clinical outcome was measured using Harris Hip Score (HHS) and Modified Merle d’Aubigne and Postel (MAP) score, and quality of life (QOL) using 12-Item Short Form Health Survey Questionnaire (SF-12) components: Physical Component Score (PCS) and Mental Component Score (MCS); limb length discrepancy (LLD) and radiological assessment of the prosthesis was performed at the latest follow-up. Reinfection and revision surgery after THA for any reason was documented.Aims
Methods
Not all total hip arthroplasty cases are created equal is a maxim that holds true for both primary and revision scenarios. Complex cases involve patients presenting with compromised bone and/or soft tissue. For primary cases, these include hips with dysplasia,
Not all total hip arthroplasty cases are created equal is a maxim that holds true for both primary and revision scenarios. Complex cases involve patients presenting with compromised bone and/or soft tissue. For primary cases, these include hips with dysplasia,