Investigate the functional outcome of medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) surgery for patella instability. Compare functional outcome of direct MPFL repair and reconstruction using hamstring graft. All patients that underwent MPFL surgery for patella instability between 2007-2010 were retrospectively identified from operative records. Patients were divided based on whether they underwent direct repair of MPFL, or reconstruction using hamstring graft. The Kujala scoring questionnaire for patellofemoral disorders (max score 100) was used to assess their functional outcome following surgery.Purpose
Methods
The meniscal repairs were carried out by a single surgeon over a period of 4 years. 30 patients ( 1st set) had isolated meniscal repairs. 9 patients ( 2nd set) had meniscal repairs and ACL reconstruction at the same time. 11 patients (3rd set) had meniscal repair followed by ACL reconstruction few months later. The patients were seen in the clinic at 2, 6, 24 weeks post surgery and then kept under surveillance.
There was only 1 failure in the 2nd set who needed partial menisectomy 19 months post repair. This gives it a failure rate of 11.1%. In the 3rd set, there were 2 failures out of whom one needed partial menisectomy and other needed re-repair using the arrows at 3 and 7 months respectively post repair at the time of ACL reconstruction, a failure rate of 18.8%.
There has been speculation as to whether the outcome of revision total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is as successful as primary TKA. The purpose of this study was to assess patient outcomes following revision TKA and compare them to patient outcomes following primary TKA. This study collected data prospectively from patients operated upon by one surgeon using one prosthesis in each group. Patients completed SF12 and WOMAC questionnaires pre-operatively and at six and twelve months post-operatively. In the primary TKA group there were 84 patients. In the revision TKA group there were 60 patients. Statistical analysis was performed using paired and unpaired t-tests. Results showed that the improvements in SF12 physical scores and WOMAC pain, stiffness and function scores in both primary TKA and revision TKA patients were statistically significant (p <
0.0001). There was no significant difference in the magnitude of the improvement in SF12 physical (p = 0.7145) and WOMAC pain (p = 0.0902), stiffness (p = 0.1557) and function (p = 0.3152) scores between the primary and revision patients following surgery. The mental scores of patients in both groups showed no significant difference following surgery (Primary p = 0.823, Revision p = 0.7095). The findings show that primary and revision TKA lead to a comparable improvement in patient perceived outcomes of physical health parameters. However, there is no significant improvement in patient perception of mental health.