When performing revision total hip arthroplasty using diaphyseal-engaging titanium tapered stems (TTS), the recommended 3 to 4 cm of stem-cortical diaphyseal contact may not be available. In challenging cases such as these with only 2 cm of contact, can sufficient axial stability be achieved and what is the benefit of a prophylactic cable? This study sought to determine, first, whether a prophylactic cable allows for sufficient axial stability when the contact length is 2 cm, and second, if differing TTS taper angles (2° vs 3.5°) impact these results. A biomechanical matched-pair cadaveric study was designed using six matched pairs of human fresh cadaveric femora prepared so that 2 cm of diaphyseal bone engaged with 2° (right femora) or 3.5° (left femora) TTS. Before impaction, three matched pairs received a single 100 lb-tensioned prophylactic beaded cable; the remaining three matched pairs received no cable adjuncts. Specimens underwent stepwise axial loading to 2600 N or until failure, defined as stem subsidence > 5 mm.Aims
Methods
The worldwide COVID-19 pandemic is directly impacting the field of orthopaedic surgery and traumatology with postponed operations, changed status of planned elective surgeries and acute emergencies in patients with unknown infection status. To this point, Germany's COVID-19 infection numbers and death rate have been lower than those of many other nations. This article summarizes the current regimen used in the field of orthopaedics in Germany during the COVID-19 pandemic. Internal university clinic guidelines, latest research results, expert consensus, and clinical experiences were combined in this article guideline.Aims
Methods
Tranexamic acid (TXA) and fibrin sealants have gained widespread use in total knee arthroplasty. They can decrease bleeding, drainage volume, hematoma formation, and incidence of blood transfusion. However, they are costly and carry a theoretical risk of infection transmission and thrombosis. This study compares the two pharmacologic interventions to preoperative autologous blood donation as well as no intervention. This prospective study evaluated a process change within our blood management program over the last five years. The program began initially with a comparison of only routine hemostasis compared to routine preoperative autologous blood donation (PABD) for all patients (Group 1), which then evolved into a targeted PABD protocol where only anaemic patients predonated (Group 2). Subsequently, patients received topical fibrin sealant for a year (Group 3), after which the topical TXA protocol was introduced and is still in place (Group 4).Background
Methods
Oxidized zirconium (OxZr) is used as a ceramic surface for femoral components in total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The aim of this study was to investigate its performance by examining retrieved femoral components and their corresponding PE inserts in matched comparison with conventional chrome/cobalt/molybdenum alloy (CrCoMo). 11 retrieved posterior stabilized (PS) TKA with an OxZr femoral component were included. From a cohort of 56 retrieved TKA with CrCoMo femoral components, pairs were matched according to duration of implantation, patient age, reason for revision, and BMI. The retrieved tibial polyethylene (PE) inserts were analyzed for wear using the Hood classification. Femoral components were optically viewed at 8–32x magnification and screened for scratching, pitting, delamination, and striation. Profilometry was performed to measure surface roughness of the OxZr components using a non-contact white light profiler.Introduction
Methods
78 patients (41 male and 37 female) with a revision total knee or hip arthroplasty were enrolled in this prospective study to evaluate the role of new laboratory markers in the diagnostic of deep implant infection. The average age at the time of surgery was 64 years. Based on intraoperative cultures, 21 patients had a septic and 57 patients had an aseptic revision total joint arthroplasty. White blood cell counts, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein levels, interleukin-6, procalcito-nin and TNF-alpha were measured in preoperative blood samples. Diagnostic cut of values were determined by Receiver Operating Characteristic curve analysis. If patients with rheumatoid arthritis and other concomitant infections are excluded the C-reactive protein (>
3.2md/dl) and interleukin 6 (>
12 pg/ml) have the highest sensitivity (0.95). Interleukin 6 is less specific than the C-reactive protein (0.87 versus 0.96). Combining C-reactive protein and interleukin identifies all patients with deep implant infection. Procalcitonin (>
0.3 ng/ml) and TNF-alpha (>
40 ng/ml) are very specific (0.98 versus 0.94)) but have a low sensitivity (0.33 versus 0.43). The combination of C-reactive protein and interleu-kin 6 is an excellent screening tests for deep implant infection. Highly specific marker like procalcitoninn as well as preoperative joint aspiration might be useful to identify patients with true positive CRP and/or interleu-kin 6 levels.