While total shoulder arthroplasty (TSA) is a generally successful procedure, glenoid loosening remains a common complication. Though the occurrence of loosening was related to patient-specific factors, biomechanical factors related to implant features may also affect the fixation of the glenoid component, in particular increased glenohumeral mismatch that could result in eccentric loads and translations. In this study, a novel test setup was used to quantify glenohumeral pressures for different motion patterns after TSA. Six cadaveric human shoulders were implanted with total shoulder replacements (Exactech, Inc., USA) and subjected to cyclic internal-external, flexion-extension and abduction-adduction rotations in a passive motion testing apparatus. The system was coupled to a pressure sensor system (Tekscan, Inc., USA) to acquire joint loads and to a Zebris system (Zebris Medical, GmbH, Germany) to measure joint kinematics. The specimens were subjected to a total of 2160 cycles and peak pressures were compared for each motion pattern.Background
Methods
Since the development of biomimetic and ceramic bone reconstructive in the early 1970, these specialised bioreactors intended for bone or cartilage regeneration have come a long way in trying to design an alternative procedure other than autogenous bone grafting. However, all known biomaterials still fall short of inducing substantial bone formation
Stemless shoulder implants have recently gained increasing popularity. Advantages include an anatomic reconstruction of the humerus with preservation of bone stock for upcoming revisions. Several implant designs have been introduced over the last years. However, only few studies evaluated the impact of the varying designs on the load transfer and bone remodeling. The aim of this study was to compare the differences between two stemless shoulder implant designs using the micro finite element (µFE) method. Two cadaveric human humeri (low and high bone mineral density) were scanned with a resolution of 82µm by high resolution peripheral quantitative computer tomography (HR-pQCT). Images were processed to allow virtual implantation of two types of reverse-engineered stemless humeral implants (Implant 1: Eclipse, Arthrex, with fenestrated cage screw and Implant 2: Simpliciti, Tornier, with three fins). The resulting images were converted to µFE models consisting of up to 78 million hexahedral elements with isotropic elastic properties based on the literature. These models were subjected to two loading conditions (medial and along the central implant axis) and solved for internal stresses with a parallel solver (parFE, ETH Zurich) on a Linux Cluster. The bone tissue stresses were analysed according to four subregions (dividing plane: sagittal and frontal) at two depths starting from the bone-implant surface and the distal region ending distally from the tip of Implant 1 (proximal, distal)Introduction
Materials and Methods
Glenoid loosening, still a main complication for shoulder arthroplasty, was suggested to be related implant design, surgical aspects, and also bone quality. However, typical studies of fixation do not account for heterogeneity in bone morphology and density which were suggested to affect fixation failure. In this study, a combination of cyclic rocking horse tests on cadaver specimens and microCT-based finite element (microFE) analysis of specimens of a wide range of bone density were used to evaluate the effects of periprosthetic bone quality on the risks of loosening of anatomical keeled or pegged glenoid implants. Six pairs of cadaveric scapulae, scanned with a quantitative computer tomography (QCT) scanner to calculate bone mineral density (BMD), were implanted with either cemented anatomical pegged or keeled glenoid components and tested under constant glenohumeral load while a humeral head component was moved cyclically in the inferior and superior directions. Edge displacements were measured after 1000, 4000 and 23000 test cycles, and tested for statistical differences with regards to changes or implant design. Relationships were established between edge displacements and QCT-based BMD below the implant. Four other specimens were scanned with high-resolution peripheral QCT (82µm) and implanted with the same 2 implants to generate virtual models. These were loaded with constant glenohumeral force, varying glenohumeral conformity and superior or inferior load shifts while internal stresses at the cement-bone and implant-cement interfaces were calculated and related to apparent bone density in the periprosthetic zone.Introduction
Methods
Insufficient arthroscopic cuff tear reconstruction leading to massive osteoarthritis and irreparable rotator cuff tears might be salvaged by implantation of an inverted total shoulder prosthesis Delta in the elderly. However, despite the generally high success rate and satisfying clinical results of inverted total shoulder arthroplasty, this treatment option has potential complications. Therefore, the objective of this study was a prospective evaluation of the clinical and radiological outcome after a minimum of 2 years follow-up of patients undergoing inverted shoulder replacement with or without prior rotator cuff repair. Sixty-eight shoulders in 66 patients (36 women and 30 men) operated between February 2002 and June 2007 with a mean age of 66 years (ranging from 53 to 84 years) were first assessed preoperatively and then at minimum 2 years follow-up, using the Constant score for pain, Constant Shoulder Score, Oxford Shoulder Score, UCLA Shoulder rating scale, DASH Score, Rowe Score for Instability and Oxford Instability Score. 29 patients (Group A) had undergone previous shoulder arthroscopy for cuff tear reconstruction at a mean of 29 months (range 12 to 48 months) before surgery and 39 patients (Group B) underwent primary implantation of an inverted total shoulder prosthesis Delta. Any complications in both groups were assessed according to Goslings and Gouma.Introduction
Patients and Methods
Unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) in patients with isolated medial osteoarthritis of the knee is nowadays a standard procedure with good results, especially with the minimally-invasive approach. However, the survival rate of the unicompartmental knee prostheses is inferior to that of total knee prostheses. Therefore, further studying of UKA is still necessary. In most mobile bearing designs the femoral component has a spherical surface and therefore its positioning is not crucial. The role of the tibial slope in UKA has not been investigated so far. The manufacturers recommend tibial slopes with values between 10° positive slope and 5° negative slope. Most surgeons try to reconstruct the anatomical slope with a high failure by measuring the slope on x-rays. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of the tibial slope on the wear rate of a medial UKA. In vitro wear simulation of medial mobile bearing unicompartmental knee prosthesis with a spherical femoral surface (Univation ®) was performed with a customized four-station servo-hydraulic knee wear simulator (EndoLab GmbH, Thansau, Germany) reproducing exactly the walking cycle as specified in ISO 14243–1:2002(E). The tibial tray was inserted with 2 different medial tibial slopes: 0°, 8° (n=3 for each group). The lateral tibial slope of the space-holder was not changed (0° for every group). We performed a total of 5 million cycles for every different slope, the gravimetric wear rate was determined gravimetrically using an analytical balance every 500 000 cycles according to the ISO 14243–2.Introduction
Materials and methods
In recent years UHMWP sutures have gained more and more popularity in shoulder surgery. They have an increased tensile strength but were shown to have a higher rate of knot slippage due to their smooth surface. There exist different testing protocols on suture testing in dry or in wet conditions. The purpose of this study was to gain some inside as to whether or not the knot security of sliding and non-sliding knots with different suture materials is influenced by dry or wet testing conditions. We tested five common suture materials, all of them USP #2. The PDSII, the Ethibond and three ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) sutures: Fiber Wire, Orthocord and Herculine. As non-sliding knots we used Square knot and Revo knot and for sliding knots we used Fisherman and Roeder knot. 10 samples of each knot type were tested. In the first group knot tying and biomechanical testing were performed under dry conditions. In the second group the sutures were soaked in saline solution for 3 min. before knot tying and afterwards tested in saline bath. Cyclic loading was performed to simulate the physiological conditions. We started with a tensile load of 25 N. After 100 cycles, the load was increased to 50 N for another 100 cycles. Until suture rupture or knot slippage of 3 mm the tensile load was gradually increased by 25 N per 100 cycles. Under dry conditions 170 suture ruptures and 30 knot slippages were recorded. Under wet testing conditions 186 suture ruptures and 14 knot slippages were seen, which tested statistically significant. Failure by knot slippage (n=44) was seen under dry and saline testing conditions mainly with UHMWPE sutures particularly with Herculine suture. Knot slippage occured only with sliding knots. With the Ethibond suture no knot slippage was found regardless of the testing conditions and applied knot type. Across all knot types the UHMPE-sutures were significantly stronger in ultimate load to failure than Ethibond and PDSII under dry and wet testing conditions. Is the information we get from testing dry suture material reliable and helpful for our daily practice? Our study clearly showed: No! The mode of failure and the number of knot-failure differs significantly in wet testing conditions compared to dry testing. We found that the number of knot-failures is higher when tested with dry sutures than in wet testing conditions. The soaking of the suture material with fluid improves its “skid-resistance”. As we expected showed the UHMWP sutures with their smooth surface a high number of knot-failures compared to polyethylen suture Ethibond, which did not show a single knot-failure in dry or wet tesing conditions. The maximum failure load showed clearly the superiority of the new UHMWP suture material, with around 300 N being double as high as for polyethylen and polydioxone sutures.
The incidence of rotator cuff tears increases with age, thus the rotator cuff tear is often associated with osteoporotic or osteopenic bone in the proximal humerus, especially with female patients. For testing of fixation devices such as suture anchors used in rotator cuff repair often animal bones are used. They are easily to obtain, inexpensive and some have been found to be similar to human bone. But can we rely on the results drawn from these studies in our daily surgical practice? The purpose of this study was to compare the trabecular bone mineral density, the trabecular bone volume fraction and the cortical layer thicknes in the greater tubercle in different species to evaluate their infiuence on primary stability of suture anchors under a cyclic loading protocol representing the physiologic forces placed on rotator cuff repairs in vivo. We hypothezised that maximum pullout forces as well as the modes of failure are different for a suture anchors in different humeri. The available three different types of anchor fixation design (screw: Spiralok 5mm, Super Revo 5mm, press-fit: Bioknotless RC, wedging: Ultrasorb) were tested. The bone mineral density (BMD) of the humeri was measured by a 64-slice-computed tomography system. Each anchor was tested individually until failure. The sutures were pulled at 135° to the axis of the humeral shaft, simulating the physiological pull of the supraspinatus tendon. Starting with 75 N the tensile load was gradually increased by 25 N after everey 50 cycles until failure of the anchor fixation system occurred. The ultimate failure load, the system displacement after the first pull with 75 N and the mode of failure were recorded. The ultimate failure loads of each anchor were different in the human osteopenic, human healthy, ovine and bovine humeri. The statistical significancies for pull out forces between the anchors varied from species to species. The biomechanical testing of suture anchors for arthroscopic rotator cuff repair in ovine and bovine humeri does not give reliable data that can be transferred to the human situation. The significances between the suture anchors found in ovine and bovine humeri are different from the results in human humeri. When taking the impaired bone quality of older patients into account the results from ovine and bovine humeri are even less predictable. We found a positive correlation between maximum failure load and cortical layer thickness for the Super Revo and the Ultrasorb anchor. The ultimate failure load seems to depend mainly on the cortical thickness and on the subcortical trabecular bone quality.
The ultimate pull-out strenngth, the initial displacement in millimeters after the first pull with 75 N and the modes of failure were recorded.
In qRT-PCR a redifferentiation of human chondrocytes was shown by the transfer into diffusion-culture. Within passage 1 to 3 human chondrocytes which were cultured in monolayer lost the ability to express Collagen Type II but could regain it if they were transferred to diffusion-culture. At diffusion-culture chondrocytes showed the highest expression of Collagen type II at passage 1 when compared to monolayer or to pellet-culture.
Even though the operations are largely successful, complications after joint replacement surgery occur frequently. Approximately 10% of lower limb arthroplasties need surgical revision, of which 70% are due to loosening. The purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility of 18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18F-FDG-PET) in detecting septic and aseptic endoprosthetic loosening of hip and knee endoprostheses.
The sensitivity/specificity for infectious loosening in hip replacement arthroplasties was 67%/83%, in the knee 14%/89%.
The disadvantages of sawing for precise bone cuts are well known: untrue cuts, heat and metal wear. The main limiting factors of available milling devices are the difficult handling and high costs, especially if the devices are based on a robot. Supported by clinical users and mechanical engineers a milling concept adopted from machining has been realised in order to overcome this limitations. The „All-in-One Milling-Tool“ achieves the same precision of a robot by a mechanically guided milling resection far below the necessary investment for a robot. Three methods are provided for the alignment of the resection planes and will be discussed: intramedullary adjustment, 3D CT-based planning and intramedullar performance as well as the performance under control by navigation. All versions are based on a handheld resection and guarantee a visual and haptical feedback for the surgeon. The use of navigation has the advantage of the accurate transfer of the 3D plan into the OR, the interactive facilitated alignment und resection steps and the documentation of planned and actual implant position.
The disadvantages of sawing for precise bone cuts are well known: untrue cuts, heat and metal wear. The main limiting factors of available milling devices are the difficult handling and high costs, especially if the devices are based on a robot. Supported by clinical users and mechanical engineers a milling concept adopted from industrial machining has been realised in order to overcome this limitations. The “All-in-One Milling-Tool” achieves the same precision of a robot by a mechanically guided milling resection far below the necessary investment for a robot. Once fixed at the femur, the device allows all femural and tibial resections. Three methods are provided for the alignment of the resection planes and will be discussed: intramedullary adjustment, 3D CT-based planning and intramedullar performance as well as the performance under navigation control. All versions are based on a handheld resection and guarantee a visual and haptical feedback for the surgeon. The use of navigation has the advantage of the accurate transfer of the 3D plan into the OR, the interactive guided and facilitated alignment und resection steps and the documentation of planned and actual implant position.