Arthritis of the wrist is a painful disabling
condition that has various causes and presentations. The traditional treatment
has been a total wrist fusion at a price of the elimination of movement.
However, forms of treatment which allow the preservation of movement
are now preferred. Modern arthroplasties of the wrist are still
not sufficiently robust to meet the demands of many patients, nor
do they restore normal kinematics of the wrist. A preferable compromise
may be selective excision and partial fusion of the wrist using
knowledge of the aetiology and pattern of degenerative change to
identify which joints can be sacrificed and which can be preserved. This article provides an overview of the treatment options available
for patients with arthritis of the wrist and an algorithm for selecting
an appropriate surgical strategy. Cite this article:
The routine use of patient reported outcome measures
(PROMs) in evaluating the outcome after arthroplasty by healthcare
organisations reflects a growing recognition of the importance of
patients’ perspectives in improving treatment. Although widely embraced
in the NHS, there are concerns that PROMs are being used beyond
their means due to a poor understanding of their limitations. This paper reviews some of the current challenges in using PROMs
to evaluate total knee arthroplasty. It highlights alternative methods
that have been used to improve the assessment of outcome. Cite this article:
We investigated whether the indentation of bone
cement spacers used in revision of infected joint arthroplasty with a
MacDonald dissector increased the elution of antibiotic The fluid sampled at 72 hours from the indented discs containing
0.17 g gentamicin (0.88% w/w) contained a mean of 113 mcg/ml (90.12
to 143.5) compared with 44.5 mcg/ml (44.02 to 44.90) in the fluid
sampled from the plain discs (p = 0.012). In discs containing 0.33
g gentamicin (1.75% w/w), the concentration eluted from the indented discs
at 72 hours was a mean of 316 mcg/ml (223 to 421) compared with
a mean of 118 mcg/ml (100 to 140) from the plain discs (p <
0.001). At two weeks, these significant differences persisted. At nine
weeks the indented discs eluted a greater concentration for all
gentamicin doses, but the difference was only significant for the
discs containing 0.17 g (0.88% w/w, p = 0.006). However if the area
under the curve is taken as a measure of the total antibiotic eluted,
the indented discs eluted more gentamicin than the plain discs for
the 0.17 g (0.88% w/w, p = 0.031), the 0.25 g (1.41% w/w, p <
0.001) and the 0.33 g (1.75% w/w, p <
0.001) discs. When preparing antibiotic spacers for use in staged revision
arthroplasty surgery we recommend indenting the spacer with a MacDonald
dissector to increase the elution of antibiotic. Cite this article:
A retrospective review was performed of patients
undergoing primary cementless total knee replacement (TKR) using
porous tantalum performed by a group of surgical trainees. Clinical
and radiological follow-up involved 79 females and 26 males encompassing
115 knees. The mean age was 66.9 years (36 to 85). Mean follow-up
was 7 years (2 to 11). Tibial and patellar components were porous
tantalum monoblock implants, and femoral components were posterior
stabilised (PS) in design with cobalt–chromium fibre mesh. Radiological
assessments were made for implant positioning, alignment, radiolucencies,
lysis, and loosening. There was 95.7% survival of implants. There
was no radiological evidence of loosening and no osteolysis found.
No revisions were performed for aseptic loosening. Average tibial
component alignment was 1.4° of varus (4°of valgus to 9° varus),
and 6.2° (3° anterior to 15° posterior) of posterior slope. Mean
femoral component alignment was 6.6° (1° to 11°) of valgus. Mean tibiofemoral
alignment was 5.6° of valgus (7° varus to 16° valgus). Patellar
tilt was a mean of 2.4° lateral (5° medial to 28° lateral). Patient
satisfaction with improvement in pain was 91%. Cementless TKR incorporating
porous tantalum yielded good clinical and radiological outcomes
at a mean of follow-up of seven-years. Cite this article:
The December 2014 Knee Roundup360 looks at: national guidance on arthroplasty thromboprophylaxis is effective; unicompartmental knee replacement has the edge in terms of short-term complications; stiff knees, timing and manipulation; neuropathic pain and total knee replacement; synovial fluid α-defensin and CRP: a new gold standard in joint infection diagnosis?; how to assess anterior knee pain?; where is the evidence? Five new implants under the spotlight; and a fresh look at ACL reconstruction
The August 2015 Research Roundup360 looks at: Lightbulbs, bleeding and procedure durations; Infection and rheumatoid agents; Infection rates and ‘bundles of care’ revisited; ACI: new application for a proven technology?; Hydrogel coating given the thumbs up; Hydroxyapatite as a smart coating?
The August 2015 Wrist &
Hand Roundup360 looks at: Scaphoid screws out?; Stiff fingers under the spotlight; Trigger finger: is complexity needed?; Do we really need to replace the base of the thumb?; Scapholunate ligament injuries and their treatment: a missed research opportunity?; Proximal row carpectomy
Although patients with a history of venous thromboembolism
(VTE) who undergo lower limb joint replacement are thought to be
at high risk of further VTE, the actual rate of recurrence has not
been reported. The purpose of this study was to identify the recurrence rate
of VTE in patients who had undergone lower limb joint replacement,
and to compare it with that of patients who had undergone a joint
replacement without a history of VTE. From a pool of 6646 arthroplasty procedures (3344 TKR, 2907 THR,
243 revision THR, 152 revision TKR) in 5967 patients (68% female,
mean age 67.7; 21 to 96) carried out between 2009 and 2011, we retrospectively
identified 118 consecutive treatment episodes in 106 patients (65%
female, mean age 70; 51 to 88,) who had suffered a previous VTE.
Despite mechanical prophylaxis and anticoagulation with warfarin,
we had four recurrences by three months (3.4% of 118) and six by
one year (5.1% of 118). In comparison, in all our other joint replacements
the rate of VTE was 0.54% (35/6528). The relative risk of a VTE by 90 days in patients who had undergone
a joint replacement with a history of VTE compared with those with
a joint replacement and no history of VTE was 6.3 (95% confidence
interval, 2.3 to 17.5). There were five complications in the previous
VTE group related to bleeding or over-anticoagulation. Cite this article:
Satisfaction with care is important to both patients
and to those who pay for it. The Net Promoter Score (NPS), widely
used in the service industries, has been introduced into the NHS
as the ‘friends and family test’; an overarching measure of patient
satisfaction. It assesses the likelihood of the patient recommending
the healthcare received to another, and is seen as a discriminator
of healthcare performance. We prospectively assessed 6186 individuals
undergoing primary lower limb joint replacement at a single university
hospital to determine the Net Promoter Score for joint replacements
and to evaluate which factors contributed to the response. Achieving pain relief (odds ratio (OR) 2.13, confidence interval
(CI) 1.83 to 2.49), the meeting of pre-operative expectation (OR
2.57, CI 2.24 to 2.97), and the hospital experience (OR 2.33, CI
2.03 to 2.68) are the domains that explain whether a patient would
recommend joint replacement services. These three factors, combined
with the type of surgery undertaken (OR 2.31, CI 1.68 to 3.17),
drove a predictive model that was able to explain 95% of the variation
in the patient’s recommendation response. Though intuitively similar,
this ‘recommendation’ metric was found to be materially different
to satisfaction responses. The difference between THR (NPS 71) and
TKR (NPS 49) suggests that no overarching score for a department
should be used without an adjustment for case mix. However, the
Net Promoter Score does measure a further important dimension to
our existing metrics: the patient experience of healthcare delivery. Cite this article:
Partial knee arthroplasty (PKA), either medial
or lateral unicompartmental knee artroplasty (UKA) or patellofemoral arthroplasty
(PFA) are a good option in suitable patients and have the advantages
of reduced operative trauma, preservation of both cruciate ligaments
and bone stock, and restoration of normal kinematics within the
knee joint. However, questions remain concerning long-term survival.
The goal of this review article was to present the long-term results
of medial and lateral UKA, PFA and combined compartmental arthroplasty
for multicompartmental disease. Medium- and long-term studies suggest
reasonable outcomes at ten years with survival greater than 95% in
UKA performed for medial osteoarthritis or osteonecrosis, and similarly
for lateral Cite this article:
The aim of this prospective multicentre study
was to report the patient satisfaction after total knee replacement (TKR),
undertaken with the aid of intra-operative sensors, and to compare
these results with previous studies. A total of 135 patients undergoing
TKR were included in the study. The soft-tissue balance of each
TKR was quantified intra-operatively by the sensor, and 18 (13%)
were found to be unbalanced. A total of 113 patients (96.7%) in
the balanced group and 15 (82.1%) in the unbalanced group were satisfied
or very satisfied one year post-operatively (p = 0.043). A review of the literature identified no previous study with
a mean level of satisfaction that was greater than the reported
level of satisfaction of the balanced TKR group in this study. Ensuring
soft-tissue balance by using intra-operative sensors during TKR
may improve satisfaction. Cite this article:
The August 2015 Hip &
Pelvis Roundup360 looks at: The well-fixed acetabular revision; Predicting complications in revision arthroplasty; Is infection associated with fixation?; Front or back? An enduring question in hip surgery; Muscle-sparing approaches?; Gabapentin as a post-operative analgesic adjunct; An Indian take on AVN of the hip; Weight loss and arthroplasty
The October 2014 Knee Roundup360 looks at: microfracture equivalent to OATS; examination better than MRI in predicting hamstrings re-injury; a second view on return to play with hamstrings injuries; dislocation risks in the Oxford Unicompartmental Knee; what about the tibia?; getting on top of lateral facet pain post TKR; readmission in TKR; patient-specific instrumentation; treating infrapatellar saphenous neuralgia; and arthroscopy in the middle-aged.
The effective capture of outcome measures in
the healthcare setting can be traced back to Florence Nightingale’s
investigation of the in-patient mortality of soldiers wounded in
the Crimean war in the 1850s. Only relatively recently has the formalised collection of outcomes
data into Registries been recognised as valuable in itself. With the advent of surgeon league tables and a move towards value
based health care, individuals are being driven to collect, store
and interpret data. Following the success of the National Joint Registry, the British
Association of Spine Surgeons instituted the British Spine Registry.
Since its launch in 2012, over 650 users representing the whole
surgical team have registered and during this time, more than 27 000
patients have been entered onto the database. There has been significant publicity regarding the collection
of outcome measures after surgery, including patient-reported scores.
Over 12 000 forms have been directly entered by patients themselves,
with many more entered by the surgical teams. Questions abound: who should have access to the data produced
by the Registry and how should they use it? How should the results
be reported and in what forum? Cite this article:
Mortality rates reported by the National Joint Registry for England
and Wales (NJR) were higher following cemented total knee replacement
(TKR) compared with uncemented procedures. The aim of this study
is to examine and compare the effects of cemented and uncemented
TKR on the activation of selected markers of inflammation, endothelium,
and coagulation, and on the activation of selected cytokines involved
in the various aspects of the systemic response following surgery. This was a single centre, prospective, case-control study. Following
enrolment, blood samples were taken pre-operatively, and further
samples were collected at day one and day seven post-operatively.
One patient in the cemented group developed a deep-vein thrombosis
confirmed on ultrasonography and was excluded, leaving 19 patients
in this cohort (mean age 67.4, (Objective
Methods
The June 2015 Research Roundup360 looks at: Tranexamic acid: just give it – it’s not important how!; The anterolateral ligament re-examined; Warfarin a poor post-operative agent; Passive exoskeleton the orthosis of the future?; Musculoskeletal medicine: a dark art to UK medical students?; Alendronic acid and bone density post arthroplasty; Apples with oranges? Knee functional scores revisited
The long term biological effects of wear products
following total hip arthroplasty (THA) are unclear. However, the indications
for THA are expanding, with increasingly younger patients undergoing
the procedure. This prospective, randomised study compared two groups of patients
undergoing THA after being randomised to receive one of two different
bearing surfaces: metal-on-polyethylene (MoP) n = 22 and metal-on-metal
(MoM) n = 23. We investigated the relationship between three variables:
bearing surface (MoP Our results demonstrated significantly higher mean cobalt and
chromium (Co and Cr) blood levels in the MoM group at all follow-up
points following surgery (p <
0.01), but there were no significant
differences in the chromosomal aberration indices between MoM and
MoP at two or five years (two years: p = 0.56, p = 0.08, p = 0.91, p
= 0.51 and five years: p = 0.086, p = 0.73, p = 0.06, p = 0.34)
for translocations, breaks, loss and gain of chromosomes respectively.
Regression analysis showed a strong linear relationship between
Cr levels and the total chromosomal aberration indices in the MoM
group (R2 = 0.90016), but this was not as strong for
Co (R2 = 0.68991). In the MoP group, the analysis revealed
a poor relationship between Cr levels and the total chromosomal
aberration indices (R2 = 0.23908) but a slightly stronger
relationship for Co (R2 = 0.64292). Across both groups,
Spearman’s correlation detected no overall association between Co and Cr
levels and each of the studied chromosomal aberrations. There remains
no clear indication which THA bearing couple is the most biocompatible,
especially in young active patients. While THA continues to be very
successful at alleviating pain and restoring function, the long-term
biological implications of the procedure still require further scrutiny. Cite this article:
The June 2015 Hip &
Pelvis Roundup360 looks at: neuraxial anaesthesia and large joint arthroplasty; revision total hip arthoplasty: factors associated with re-revision surgery; acetabular version and clinical outcomes in impingement surgery; hip precautions may be ineffective; implant selection and cost effectiveness; femoroacetabular impingement in the older age group; multiple revision in hip arthroplasty