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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 3 | Pages 355 - 357
1 May 1993
Ivory J Thomas I

The results are reported of an audit of allografts collected in the first 18 months of the Leicester Bone Bank. We retrieved 161 femoral heads at primary arthroplasty of which 103 were implanted into 59 patients. There were deep infections in two recipients and wound infections in five. In two of these cases, culture of the femoral head at implantation was positive but the organisms grown were not those which caused the clinical infection. We retrieved 22 large allografts from six cadavers. Four of these were contaminated at retrieval and required irradiation for sterilisation. There has been one clinical infection in the nine large allografts implanted so far. We recommend that all bone banks undertake prospective audit to ensure that high standards are maintained and wastage minimised


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 33-B, Issue 3 | Pages 316 - 322
1 Aug 1951
Herbert JJ

The technique of storing bone by refrigeration is described and the following advantages are indicated: 1) A patient avoids a second wound and the loss of bone from some other part of the body; this is a very important matter for patients in whom poliomyelitis has affected both legs. 2) Almost unlimited bone is available to the surgeon and he is consequently able to insert very large grafts and so obtain better results.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 39-B, Issue 4 | Pages 758 - 762
1 Nov 1957
Lavine LS Burger M Sobel AE

1. The influence of various methods of preserving bone on the calcifying mechanism of the tibial epiphysial cartilage of rachitic rats was studied. An in vitro calcification technique was employed.

2. Preservation by deep freezing, aqueous merthiolate, boiling, or acetone inactivated the calcifying mechanism.

3. The inactivation was reversed with calcium ions, most readily in the deep-frozen bones, less readily in the merthiolate treated bones, still less readily in the acetone stored bones, and least in boiled bones.

4. Exposure to calcium ions before preservation in the deep-freeze chest prevented inactivation.

5. The inactivation, reactivation and survival of the calcifying mechanism were confirmed by metachromasia studies.

6. The theory of the mode of action of calcium chloride on reactivation and survival of the calcifying mechanism is presented.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1307 - 1311
1 Oct 2014
Benninger E Zingg PO Kamath AF Dora C

To assess the sustainability of our institutional bone bank, we calculated the final product cost of fresh-frozen femoral head allografts and compared these costs with the use of commercial alternatives. Between 2007 and 2010 all quantifiable costs associated with allograft donor screening, harvesting, storage, and administration of femoral head allografts retrieved from patients undergoing elective hip replacement were analysed.

From 290 femoral head allografts harvested and stored as full (complete) head specimens or as two halves, 101 had to be withdrawn. In total, 104 full and 75 half heads were implanted in 152 recipients. The calculated final product costs were ā‚¬1367 per full head. Compared with the use of commercially available processed allografts, a saving of at least ā‚¬43 119 was realised over four-years (ā‚¬10 780 per year) resulting in a cost-effective intervention at our institution. Assuming a price of between ā‚¬1672 and ā‚¬2149 per commercially purchased allograft, breakeven analysis revealed that implanting between 34 and 63 allografts per year equated to the total cost of bone banking.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014;96-B:1307ā€“11


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1225 - 1228
1 Sep 2007
van de Pol GJ Sturm PDJ van Loon CJ Verhagen C Schreurs BW

Allografts of bone from the femoral head are often used in orthopaedic procedures. Although the donated heads are thoroughly tested microscopically before release by the bone bank, some surgeons take additional cultures in the operating theatre before implantation. There is no consensus about the need to take these cultures. We retrospectively assessed the clinical significance of the implantation of positive-cultured bone allografts. The contamination rate at retrieval of the allografts was 6.4% in our bone bank. Intra-operative cultures were taken from 426 femoral head allografts before implantation; 48 (11.3%) had a positive culture. The most frequently encountered micro-organism was coagulase-negative staphylococcus. Deep infection occurred in two of the 48 patients (4.2%). In only one was it likely that the same micro-organism caused the contamination and the subsequent infection. In our study, the rate of infection in patients receiving positive-cultured allografts at implantation was not higher than the overall rate of infection in allograft surgery suggesting that the positive cultures at implantation probably represent contamination and that the taking of additional cultures is not useful


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 97-B, Issue 3 | Pages 427 - 431
1 Mar 2015
Wu C Hsieh P Fan Jiang J Shih H Chen C Hu C

Fresh-frozen allograft bone is frequently used in orthopaedic surgery. We investigated the incidence of allograft-related infection and analysed the outcomes of recipients of bacterial culture-positive allografts from our single-institute bone bank during bone transplantation. The fresh-frozen allografts were harvested in a strict sterile environment during total joint arthroplasty surgery and immediately stored in a freezer at -78Āŗ to -68Āŗ C after packing. Between January 2007 and December 2012, 2024 patients received 2083 allografts with a minimum of 12 months of follow-up. The overall allograft-associated infection rate was 1.2% (24/2024). Swab cultures of 2083 allografts taken before implantation revealed 21 (1.0%) positive findings. The 21 recipients were given various antibiotics at the individual orthopaedic surgeonā€™s discretion. At the latest follow-up, none of these 21 recipients displayed clinical signs of infection following treatment. Based on these findings, we conclude that an incidental positive culture finding for allografts does not correlate with subsequent surgical site infection. Additional prolonged post-operative antibiotic therapy may not be necessary for recipients of fresh-frozen bone allograft with positive culture findings. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2015;97-B:427ā€“31


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1164 - 1171
1 Sep 2008
Ochs BG Schmid U Rieth J Ateschrang A Weise K Ochs U

Deficiencies of acetabular bone stock at revision hip replacement were reconstructed with two different types of allograft using impaction bone grafting and a Burch-Schneider reinforcement ring. We compared a standard frozen non-irradiated bone bank allograft (group A) with a freeze-dried irradiated bone allograft, vitalised with autologous marrow (group B). We studied 78 patients (79 hips), of whom 87% (69 hips) had type III acetabular defects according to the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons classification at a mean of 31.4 months (14 to 51) after surgery. At the latest follow-up, the mean Harris hip score was 69.9 points (13.5 to 97.1) in group A and 71.0 points (11.5 to 96.5) in group B. Each hip showed evidence of trabeculation and incorporation of the allograft with no acetabular loosening. These results suggest that the use of an acetabular reinforcement ring and a living composite of sterile allograft and autologous marrow appears to be a method of reconstructing acetabular deficiencies which gives comparable results to current forms of treatment


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 33-B, Issue 3 | Pages 301 - 315
1 Aug 1951
Wilson PD

1. Experimental evidence suggests that the autogenous graft exhibits some advantage over refrigerated homogenous grafts in that healing takes place more rapidly but that in the end the results are the same. 2. Histological study of fragments of healing grafts, both autogenous and refrigerated, that have been removed from human hosts shows no significant difference in the rate or method of repair. 3. Study of the clinical results of the use of homogenous transplants in 307 operations shows the bone to be well tolerated. The rate of infection in clean cases was 2ƂĀ·6 per cent; loss of bone occurred in only two cases. 4. Follow-up studies of 248 cases showed successful results obtained in 210, or 85 per cent. These are comparable with the results obtained with autogenous grafts. The healing of cancellous transplants takes place more rapidly than with cortical grafts. Transplants that have been preserved for more than one year do not heal as well as those that have been preserved for a shorter period and the failure rate is higher. 5. The operation of a bone bank is safe and practical. It offers great advantages to the patient and the surgeon from the standpoint of availability, abundance and the elimination of the necessity of secondary operations to obtain bone. When a bone bank is available the number of operations in which bone transplants are used will show a sharp increase


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 5 | Pages 511 - 517
1 May 2023
Petrie MJ Panchani S Al-Einzy M Partridge D Harrison TP Stockley I

Aims

The duration of systemic antibiotic treatment following first-stage revision surgery for periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) after total hip arthroplasty (THA) is contentious. Our philosophy is to perform an aggressive debridement, and to use a high local concentration of targeted antibiotics in cement beads and systemic prophylactic antibiotics alone. The aim of this study was to assess the success of this philosophy in the management of PJI of the hip using our two-stage protocol.

Methods

The study involved a retrospective review of our prospectively collected database from which we identified all patients who underwent an intended two-stage revision for PJI of the hip. All patients had a diagnosis of PJI according to the major criteria of the Musculoskeletal Infection Society (MSIS) 2013, a minimum five-year follow-up, and were assessed using the MSIS working group outcome-reporting tool. The outcomes were grouped into ā€˜successfulā€™ or ā€˜unsuccessfulā€™.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 5 | Pages 559 - 567
1 May 2023
Aoude A Nikomarov D Perera JR Ibe IK Griffin AM Tsoi KM Ferguson PC Wunder JS

Aims

Giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) is a locally aggressive lesion that is difficult to treat as salvaging the joint can be associated with a high rate of local recurrence (LR). We evaluated the risk factors for tumour relapse after treatment of a GCTB of the limbs.

Methods

A total of 354 consecutive patients with a GCTB underwent joint salvage by curettage and reconstruction with bone graft and/or cement or en bloc resection. Patient, tumour, and treatment factors were analyzed for their impact on LR. Patients treated with denosumab were excluded.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 3 | Pages 398 - 399
1 May 1992
Chapman P Villar R

We report the contamination rate in the Cambridge bone bank of 35 consecutive allograft specimens, all harvested in a clean-air environment, using a strict aseptic technique and antibiotic cover. Five of 27 femoral heads taken from living donors and three of eight massive allografts taken from cadavers were found to be contaminated. The contaminated femoral heads were discarded. All massive allografts were rendered sterile by gamma-irradiation. It is important to exclude bacteriological contamination of harvested and banked bone


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1174 - 1179
1 Oct 2022
Jamshidi K Bagherifard A Mirzaei A

Aims

Osteoarticular reconstruction of the distal femur in childhood has the advantage of preserving the tibial physis. However, due to the small size of the distal femur, matching the host bone with an osteoarticular allograft is challenging. In this study, we compared the outcomes and complications of a resurfaced allograft-prosthesis composite (rAPC) with those of an osteoarticular allograft to reconstruct the distal femur in children.

Methods

A retrospective analysis of 33 skeletally immature children with a malignant tumour of the distal femur, who underwent resection and reconstruction with a rAPC (n = 15) or osteoarticular allograft (n = 18), was conducted. The median age of the patients was ten years (interquartile range (IQR) 9 to 11) in the osteoarticular allograft group and nine years (IQR 8 to 10) in the rAPC group (p = 0.781). The median follow-up of the patients was seven years (IQR 4 to 8) in the osteoarticular allograft group and six years (IQR 3 to 7) in the rAPC group (p = 0.483). Limb function was evaluated using the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society (MSTS) score.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 3 | Pages 431 - 434
1 May 1988
Dodd C Fergusson C Freedman L Houghton G Thomas D

The results of a study of the use of autograft versus allograft bone in the surgery of idiopathic adolescent scoliosis are presented. Two groups of patients, matched for age, sex, level and angle of curve, received bone grafts, 20 patients having autogenous bone from the iliac crest and the other 20 having donor bone from a bone bank. Both groups had otherwise identical posterior fusions and Harrington instrumentation. There was no difference between the two groups in a blind, radiographic assessment of bone graft mass at six months, nor in maintenance of the curve correction over the same period. No major operative complications nor failures of instrumentation were encountered. There was, however, a marked reduction in operative time and blood loss in the patients receiving donor bone and also a much lower incidence of late symptoms relating to the operative sites. We conclude that, even in the presence of adequate iliac crest, the use of bank bone is superior for grafting in idiopathic scoliosis surgery


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 43-B, Issue 1 | Pages 152 - 161
1 Feb 1961
Hancox NM Owen R Singleton A

1. Cancellous bone cubes from calf and man were deproteinised with hydrogen peroxide and with ethylenediamine. 2. Long bones were removed aseptically from sheep, stored in the bone bank and used for cancellous homografts. 3. Holes were drilled in the upper part of the tibia or ulna or in the lower part of the femur of sheep. Some were left empty; others were filled with plugs of the deproteinised heterogenous bone, with autografts, or with homografts. 4. Histological appearances were studied after seventeen and thirty-six days. 5. At seventeen days repair was more advanced in the plugged holes; the biological result was better with the ethylenediamine-treated than with the peroxide-treated material. After thirty-six days repair was at an advanced stage. As much new bone had been deposited on the trabeculae of the deproteinised heterografts as on those of the homografts. 6. There was no evidence of metaplastic bone formation; new bone seemed to form from endosteal osteoblasts. 7. Certain clinical implications are briefly discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 2 | Pages 167 - 174
1 May 1975
Trevor D Johns DL Fixsen JA

The results in 102 acetabuloplasties have been assessed in eighty-six patients, with a minimum follow-up of five years. Clinical and radiological assessment was carried out according to a score system very similar to that used in previous studies, and the results were expressed as excellent, good, fair and poor according to the score obtained. Any hip requiring further stabifising procedures was automatically grouped as a failure. Subtrochanteric femoral osteotomy was used when femoral anteversion was excessive. The results revealed that 73 per cent of the hips were satisfactory (excellent or good) overall, but that a steady deterioration was evident when the five-and fifteen-year groups were compared. Few of the hips were regarded as normal on radiological grounds. Homologous bone bank rib was found to be the most satisfactory graft material. Coxa magna was the most common abnormality that was consistent with a good or excellent result. Avascular necrosis of the femoral head was found in only six hips; it was more commonly present in patients subjected to previous operation. Concentric reduction of the femoral head is essential if acetabuloplasty is to maintain stability of the hip


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1686 - 1694
1 Nov 2021
Yang H Kwak W Kang SJ Song E Seon J

Aims

To determine the relationship between articular cartilage status and clinical outcomes after medial opening-wedge high tibial osteotomy (MOHTO) for medial compartmental knee osteoarthritis at intermediate follow-up.

Methods

We reviewed 155 patients (155 knees) who underwent MOHTO from January 2008 to December 2016 followed by second-look arthroscopy with a mean 5.3-year follow-up (2.0 to 11.7). Arthroscopic findings were assessed according to the International Cartilage Repair Society (ICRS) Cartilage Repair Assessment (CRA) grading system. Patients were divided into two groups based on the presence of normal or nearly normal quality cartilage in the medial femoral condyle: good (second-look arthroscopic) status (ICRS grade I or II; n = 70), and poor (second-look arthroscopic) status (ICRS grade III or IV; n = 85) groups at the time of second-look arthroscopy. Clinical outcomes were assessed using the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) score, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), and 36-Item Short Form survey.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 3 | Pages 492 - 499
1 Mar 2021
Garcia-Rey E SaldaƱa L Garcia-Cimbrelo E

Aims

Bone stock restoration of acetabular bone defects using impaction bone grafting (IBG) in total hip arthroplasty may facilitate future re-revision in the event of failure of the reconstruction. We hypothesized that the acetabular bone defect during re-revision surgery after IBG was smaller than during the previous revision surgery. The clinical and radiological results of re-revisions with repeated use of IBG were also analyzed.

Methods

In a series of 382 acetabular revisions using IBG and a cemented component, 45 hips (45 patients) that had failed due to aseptic loosening were re-revised between 1992 and 2016. Acetabular bone defects graded according to Paprosky during the first and the re-revision surgery were compared. Clinical and radiological findings were analyzed over time. Survival analysis was performed using a competing risk analysis.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1760 - 1766
1 Dec 2020
Langlais T Hardy MB Lavoue V Barret H Wilson A Boileau P

Aims

We aimed to address the question on whether there is a place for shoulder stabilization surgery in patients who had voluntary posterior instability starting in childhood and adolescence, and later becoming involuntary and uncontrollable.

Methods

Consecutive patients who had an operation for recurrent posterior instability before the age of 18 years were studied retrospectively. All patients had failed conservative treatment for at least six months prior to surgery; and no patients had psychiatric disorders. Two groups were identified and compared: voluntary posterior instability starting in childhood which became uncontrollable and involuntary (group VBI); and involuntary posterior instability (group I). Patients were reviewed and assessed at least two years after surgery by two examiners.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 4 | Pages 524 - 529
1 Apr 2020
Jamshidi K Mirkazemi M Gharedaghi M Izanloo A Mohammadpour M Pisoudeh K Bagherifard A Mirzaei A

Aims

The consensus is that bipolar hemiarthroplasty (BHA) in allograft-prosthesis composite (APC) reconstruction of the proximal femur following primary tumour resection provides more stability than total hip arthroplasty (THA). However, no comparative study has been performed. In this study, we have compared the outcome and complication rates of these two methods.

Methods

In a retrospective study, 57 patients who underwent APC reconstruction of proximal femur following the primary tumour resection, either using BHA (29) or THA (28), were included. Functional outcome was assessed using the Musculoskeletal Tumour Society (MSTS) scoring system and Harris Hip Score (HHS). Postoperative complications of the two techniques were also compared.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1633 - 1639
1 Dec 2018
Zhao Z Yan T Guo W Yang R Tang X Yang Y

Aims

We retrospectively report our experience of managing 30 patients with a primary malignant tumour of the distal tibia; 25 were treated by limb salvage surgery and five by amputation. We compared the clinical outcomes of following the use of different methods of reconstruction.

Patients and Methods

There were 19 male and 11 female patients. The mean age of the patients was 19 years (6 to 59) and the mean follow-up was 5.1 years (1.25 to 12.58). Massive allograft was used in 11 patients, and autograft was used in 14 patients. The time to union, the survival time of the reconstruction, complication rate, and functional outcomes following the different surgical techniques were compared. The overall patient survival was also recorded.