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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 25 - 25
1 Feb 2021
Cascardo C Gehrke C Moore D Karadsheh M Flierl M Baker E
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Introduction

Dual mobility (DM) total hip arthroplasty (THA) prostheses are designed to increase stability. In the setting of primary and revision THA, DM THA are used most frequently for dysplasia and instability diagnoses, respectively. As the use of DM THA continues to increase, with 8,031 cases logged in the American Joint Replacement Registry from 2012–2018, characterizing in vivo damage and clinical failure modes are important to report.

Methods

Under IRB-approved implant retrieval protocol, 43 DM THA systems from 41 patients were included. Each DM THA component was macroscopically examined for standard damage modes. Clinically-relevant data, including patient demographics and surgical elements, were collected from medical records. Fretting and corrosion damage grading is planned, according to the Goldberg et al. classification system.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 480 - 480
1 Nov 2011
Shah A Kadakia A Tan G Karadsheh M Sabb B
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Introduction: Diagnosis of syndesmotic injuries is primarily based upon the assessment of ankle radiographs. Earlier studies examining normal radiographs are limited by small sample size and methodological issues.

Materials and Methods: One thousand four hundred and fifteen consecutive patients with ankle radiographs were reviewed. 1023 patients were excluded as a result of a history of ankle/hindfoot pain, trauma, or surgery; or radiographic evidence of ankle/hindfoot pathology. 392 patients (218 females, 174 males) with normal ankle radiographs were included. 83 of 392 patients had bilateral normal radiographs. All radiographs were reviewed independently by a fellowship-trained foot and ankle surgeon and a fellowship-trained musculoskeletal radiologist. Tibiofibular overlap and tibiofibular clear space were measured on anteroposterior (AP) and mortise radiographs. These four measurements were analyzed.

Results: Mean AP overlap was 8.3 mm (±2.5). Mean mortise overlap was 3.5 mm (±2.1), 7.7% patients had < 1 mm overlap and 4.9% of patients had < 0 mm overlap. Mean AP clear space was 4.6 mm (±1.1), 7.1% patients had > 6 mm clear space. Mean mortise clear space was 4.3 mm (±1.0), 4.3% patients had > 6 mm clear space. All measurements were significantly different between females and males (p < 0.001). Mortise clear space is the most accurate measure when obtaining contralateral radiographs. Intraobserver and interobserver reliabilities of all measurements were high (intra-class correlation coefficient range 0.820–0.983).

Discussion and Conclusion: Our data unequivocally demonstrates that basing treatment of syndesmotic injuries on previously reported radiographic criteria can lead to unnecessary operative intervention or failure to treat. Lack of overlap on the mortise view can represent a normal variant, which has not been definitively reported in prior investigations. Our data forms the basis for new radiographic criteria to evaluate syndesmotic disruption.