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The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 98-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1399 - 1405
1 Oct 2016
Rohilla R Wadhwani J Devgan A Singh R Khanna M

Aims. This is a prospective randomised study which compares the radiological and functional outcomes of ring and rail fixators in patients with an infected gap (> 3 cm) nonunion of the tibia. Patients and Methods. Between May 2008 and February 2013, 70 patients were treated at our Institute for a posttraumatic osseocutaneous defect of the tibia measuring at least 3 cm. These were randomised into two groups of 35 patients using the lottery method. Group I patients were treated with a ring fixator and group II patients with a rail fixator. The mean age was 33.2 years (18 to 64) in group I and 29.3 years (18 to 65) in group II. The mean bone gap was 5.84 cm in group I and 5.78 cm in group II. The mean followup was 33.8 months in group I and 32.6 months in group II. Bone and functional results were assessed using the classification of the Association for the Study and Application of the Method of Ilizarov (ASAMI). Functional results were also assessed at six months using the short musculoskeletal functional assessment (SMFA) score. Results. The bone result was excellent, good, fair and poor in 21, 12, 0 and 2 in group I; and 14, 15, 3, and 3 in group II, respectively. The functional results were excellent, good, fair, poor and failure in 16, 17, 1, 0 and 1 in group I; and 22, 10, 0, 3 and 0 in group II, respectively. Both fixator systems achieved comparable rates of union and functional outcomes. The rate of deep pintract infection was significantly higher in the rail fixator group but patients found it more comfortable. Conclusion. We recommend the use of a ring fixator in patients with a bone gap of more than 6 cm. Patients with a bone gap up to 6 cm can be managed with either a ring or rail fixator. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2016;98B:1399–1405


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 6 | Pages 397 - 404
1 Jun 2021
Begum FA Kayani B Magan AA Chang JS Haddad FS

Limb alignment in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) influences periarticular soft-tissue tension, biomechanics through knee flexion, and implant survival. Despite this, there is no uniform consensus on the optimal alignment technique for TKA. Neutral mechanical alignment facilitates knee flexion and symmetrical component wear but forces the limb into an unnatural position that alters native knee kinematics through the arc of knee flexion. Kinematic alignment aims to restore native limb alignment, but the safe ranges with this technique remain uncertain and the effects of this alignment technique on component survivorship remain unknown. Anatomical alignment aims to restore predisease limb alignment and knee geometry, but existing studies using this technique are based on cadaveric specimens or clinical trials with limited follow-up times. Functional alignment aims to restore the native plane and obliquity of the joint by manipulating implant positioning while limiting soft tissue releases, but the results of high-quality studies with long-term outcomes are still awaited. The drawbacks of existing studies on alignment include the use of surgical techniques with limited accuracy and reproducibility of achieving the planned alignment, poor correlation of intraoperative data to long-term functional outcomes and implant survivorship, and a paucity of studies on the safe ranges of limb alignment. Further studies on alignment in TKA should use surgical adjuncts (e.g. robotic technology) to help execute the planned alignment with improved accuracy, include intraoperative assessments of knee biomechanics and periarticular soft-tissue tension, and correlate alignment to long-term functional outcomes and survivorship.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 3 | Pages 515 - 521
1 Mar 2021
van den Kieboom J Tirumala V Box H Oganesyan R Klemt C Kwon Y

Aims

Removal of infected components and culture-directed antibiotics are important for the successful treatment of chronic periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). However, as many as 27% of chronic PJI patients yield negative culture results. Although culture negativity has been thought of as a contraindication to one-stage revision, data supporting this assertion are limited. The aim of our study was to report on the clinical outcomes for one-stage and two-stage exchange arthroplasty performed in patients with chronic culture-negative PJI.

Methods

A total of 105 consecutive patients who underwent revision arthroplasty for chronic culture-negative PJI were retrospectively evaluated. One-stage revision arthroplasty was performed in 30 patients, while 75 patients underwent two-stage exchange, with a minimum of one year's follow-up. Reinfection, re-revision for septic and aseptic reasons, amputation, readmission, mortality, and length of stay were compared between the two treatment strategies.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 4 | Pages 652 - 655
1 Aug 1987
Ross A Sneath R Scales J

Between 1969 and 1985 26 patients with destructive lesions of the distal humerus were treated by endoprosthetic replacement; each implant was custom-made and incorporated part of the distal humerus or the entire bone as well as a hinged total elbow replacement. Recurrence occurred in three of the patients with tumours, and three prostheses were removed because of deep infection in patients with previously compound injuries of the elbow. Another three loosened without infection, but none needed revision or removal and no amputations resulted. Other complications included nerve palsies, but the only deaths were from metastases. A useful range of elbow movement, with a stable arm and good hand function, was achieved in every patient


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 10, Issue 1 | Pages 15 - 17
1 Feb 2021


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 5 | Pages 762 - 769
1 Sep 1991
Roberts P Chan D Grimer R Sneath R Scales J

Over a 16-year period, 135 custom-made distal femoral prostheses, based on a fully constrained Stanmore-type knee replacement, were used in the treatment of primary malignant or aggressive benign tumours. Survivorship analysis showed a cumulative success rate of 72% at five years and 64% at seven years. Intact prostheses in 91% of the surviving patients gave good or excellent functional results. Deep infection was the major complication, occurring in 6.8% of cases; clinical aseptic loosening occurred in 6.0%. Revision surgery was carried out for loosening and infection, and the early results are encouraging. We conclude that prosthetic replacement of the distal femur can meet the objectives of limb salvage surgery


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 2 | Pages 299 - 304
1 Feb 2021
Goto E Umeda H Otsubo M Teranishi T

Aims

Various surgical techniques have been described for total hip arthroplasty (THA) in patients with Crowe type III dislocated hips, who have a large acetabular bone defect. The aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term clinical results of patients in whom anatomical reconstruction of the acetabulum was performed using a cemented acetabular component and autologous bone graft from the femoral neck.

Methods

A total of 22 patients with Crowe type III dislocated hips underwent 28 THAs using bone graft from the femoral neck between 1979 and 2000. A Charnley cemented acetabular component was placed at the level of the true acetabulum after preparation with bone grafting. All patients were female with a mean age at the time of surgery of 54 years (35 to 68). A total of 18 patients (21 THAs) were followed for a mean of 27.2 years (20 to 33) after the operation.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 2 | Pages 300 - 304
1 Mar 1992
McAuliffe J Burkhalter W Ouellette E Carneiro R

We reviewed 15 patients with an arthrodesis of the elbow using an AO compression-plate technique, after an average follow-up of 24 months. The most common indication was an open, infected high-energy injury with associated bone loss. Arthrodesis was successful in all but one patient in whom severe deep infection necessitated amputation. Eight patients were treated with the metal partly exposed in an infected wound. After removal of the metal, all wounds healed secondarily and none had clinical or radiographic signs of sepsis at latest review. Compression-plate arthrodesis of the elbow is a generally applicable method that can be used even in cases of severe bone loss. There appears to be greater certainty of union than with other techniques, and no increased risk of subsequent fracture


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 5 | Pages 737 - 741
1 Nov 1984
Rydholm U Tjornstrand B Pettersson H Lidgren L

Fifteen patients with rheumatoid arthritis had 19 elbow arthroplasties with the Wadsworth type of surface replacement prosthesis. After a follow-up period averaging 30 months, 11 patients with 15 elbow arthroplasties were entirely satisfied with their freedom from pain and range of movement. Radiologically, however, the humeral component was loose in 10 of the 19 elbows and the ulnar component in 5. Two patients had reoperation, one to remove a prosthesis for early deep infection and one to exchange a humeral component which was loose. The risk of mechanical loosening is reduced by accurate positioning of the humeral component, but there is a high potential for failure. Changes in the design of the prosthesis and better instrumentation for alignment of the components are desirable. Prosthetic replacement of the elbow should still be regarded as experimental


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1567 - 1573
7 Nov 2020
Sambri A Dalla Rosa M Scorianz M Guido D Donati DM Campanacci DA De Paolis M

Aims

The aim of this study was to report the results of three forms of reconstruction for patients with a ditsl tibial bone tumour: an intercalary resection and reconstruction, an osteoarticular reconstruction, and arthrodesis of the ankle.

Methods

A total of 73 patients with a median age of 19 years (interquartile range (IQR) 14 to 36) were included in this retrospective, multicentre study.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 1 | Pages 68 - 73
1 Jan 2003
Keating JF Hajducka CL Harper J

We used calcium-phosphate cement combined with minimal internal fixation to treat 49 fractures of the lateral tibial plateau. There were 25 split depression fractures, 22 pure depression fractures and two bicondylar fractures. Anatomical reduction was obtained in 38 fractures, satisfactory reduction in nine and imperfect reduction in two. Of 44 patients reviewed at one year, 33 were rated as having an excellent reduction. Functional outcome as measured by the Rasmussen score was good or excellent at six months in 92% (44/48) of patients and in 95% (42/44) at one year. Eight (16%) showed some loss of reduction of the plateau. In seven of these the loss of reduction was slight (< 3 mm) and no action was taken. One patient with a deep infection had gross loss of reduction and a poor functional outcome. Calcium-phosphate cement is a useful alternative to bone grafting for the treatment of fractures of the tibial plateau


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. 70-B, Issue 1 | Pages 40 - 44
1 Jan 1988
Nunn D

The Ring plastic-on-metal total hip replacement was introduced with the intention of combining the advantages of the cemented low-friction arthroplasty with those of a cementless system. Fourteen hundred and eighty-eight of these procedures have been reviewed. The results of a two to seven-year follow-up, and of a group which has completed at least five years are presented. There was an excellent clinical result in 93% of the whole series, and in 87% of the five-year group. When graded on the Charnley scale there was an average score of 5.86 for pain, 5.96 for function and 5.9 for range of movement, which compares favourably with cemented replacements. The deep infection rate was zero, and the revision rate 1.5% for the whole series. Erosive problems occurred with the smaller acetabular components and the reasons are discussed. The ease and success of exchange have been maintained


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 6 | Pages 1009 - 1020
1 Jun 2021
Ng N Gaston P Simpson PM Macpherson GJ Patton JT Clement ND

Aims

The aims of this systematic review were to assess the learning curve of semi-active robotic arm-assisted total hip arthroplasty (rTHA), and to compare the accuracy, patient-reported functional outcomes, complications, and survivorship between rTHA and manual total hip arthroplasty (mTHA).

Methods

Searches of PubMed, Medline, and Google Scholar were performed in April 2020 in line with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis statement. Search terms included “robotic”, “hip”, and “arthroplasty”. The criteria for inclusion were published clinical research articles reporting the learning curve for rTHA (robotic arm-assisted only) and those comparing the implantation accuracy, functional outcomes, survivorship, or complications with mTHA.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 4 | Pages 393 - 397
1 Nov 1977
Williams E Taylor A Arden G Edwards D

In fifty-six patients with ankylosing spondylitis three types of arthroplasty had been performed in ninety-nine hips. Forty-one of the patients were men and fifteen were women, their average age at operation being forty-two years. Primary pseudarthrosis produced well-satisfied patients, but only a fair result in five hips, whereas cup arthroplasty resulted in a poor outcome for eight hips, all of which needed revision. Total replacement of eighty-six hips, however, led to 73 per cent being graded as good or excellent up to ten years later. The main complications were deep infection of five hips, para-articular ossification around nine hips (six leading to bony ankylosis), and fibrous ankylosis of six hips


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 5 | Pages 797 - 801
1 Sep 1995
Choi K Chan W Lam T Cheng J

Distal radial fractures are common in children. Recent outcome studies have cast doubt on the success of treatment by closed reduction and application of plaster. The most important risk factor for poor outcome is translation of the fracture. If a distal radial fracture is displaced by more than half the diameter of the bone at the fracture site it should be classified as high risk. We performed percutaneous Kirschner-wire pinning on 157 such high-risk distal radial fractures in children under 16 years of age. The predicted early and late failure rate was reduced from 60% to 14% and only 1.5% of patients had significant limitation of forearm movement of more than 15 degrees in the final assessment at a mean of 31 months after operation. There were no cases of early physeal closure or deep infection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 6 | Pages 803 - 806
1 Nov 1992
Kristensen O Nafei A Kjaersgaard-Andersen P Hvid I Jensen J

We have reviewed at an average period of ten years the results of 71 consecutive primary arthroplasties with the Insall-Burstein total condylar knee prosthesis in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Their mean age at surgery was 52 years (24 to 72). At follow-up the overall results (Hospital for Special Surgery knee rating score) were excellent or good in 77%, fair in 11% and poor in 11%. There was residual pain in only 5% of patients with prostheses in situ; 58% could walk more than 500 m, and the median range of motion was 108 degrees. Eight knees had been revised. Five underwent arthrodesis because of deep infection and three needed revision arthroplasty for mechanical loosening. The crude survival rate of the arthroplasties was 89%. The presence of radiolucency around the tibial component correlated significantly with the severity of residual pain


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 2 | Pages 382 - 390
1 Feb 2021
Wang H Tang X Ji T Yan T Yang R Guo W

Aims

There is an increased risk of dislocation of the hip after the resection of a periacetabular tumour and endoprosthetic reconstruction of the defect in the hemipelvis. The aim of this study was to determine the rate and timing of dislocation and to identify its risk factors.

Methods

To determine the dislocation rate, we conducted a retrospective single-institution study of 441 patients with a periacetabular tumour who had undergone a standard modular hemipelvic endoprosthetic reconstruction between 2003 and 2019. After excluding ineligible patients, 420 patients were enrolled. Patient-specific, resection-specific, and reconstruction-specific variables were studied using univariate and multivariate analyses.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 4 | Pages 498 - 503
1 Nov 1978
Colville J Raunio P

During the years 1971 to 1975, 378 Charnley low-friction arthroplasties of the hip were performed on 278 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. The average age at operation was thirty-nine years. The follow-up time ranged from one to six years (mean two and a half years). Forty per cent of patients were receiving steroids at the time of operation. The most common complications were loosening of the prosthesis (3.4%), perforation of the femoral cortex and fracture. Deep infection occurred in 0.7%, dislocation in 0.7%, and thromboembolic episodes in 1.3%. Ninety-five per cent of patients were free of pain at follow-up compared to 84% who were severely handicapped by pain before operation. In addition, the increased mobility in 98.5% of patients and their improved independence makes hip replacement a recommendable procedure in these patients


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 5 | Pages 735 - 739
1 Sep 1994
Inao S Gotoh E Ando M

We performed total hip replacement on 25 congenitally dislocated hips using corticocancellous bone from the femoral neck as a bone graft to reconstruct the deficient acetabulum. Two patients (two hips) died less than five years after surgery and three hips developed deep infection. We reviewed the remaining 20 hips at an average interval of 8.4 years (5.2 to 12.9). Their functional scores (modified Merle d'Aubigne and Postel) averaged 5.7 for pain, 5.1 for walking ability, and 4.2 for range of motion. Radiographs showed union and remodelling of the grafted bone in every case. There were radiological signs of aseptic loosening in three sockets (15%) without collapse of the grafted bone. None of the femoral stems was loose. No revision operation has been performed. Our results confirm the usefulness in the long term of femoral autografts for severe acetabular deficiency