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Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 5 | Pages 401 - 410
20 May 2024
Bayoumi T Burger JA van der List JP Sierevelt IN Spekenbrink-Spooren A Pearle AD Kerkhoffs GMMJ Zuiderbaan HA

Aims

The primary objective of this registry-based study was to compare patient-reported outcomes of cementless and cemented medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) during the first postoperative year. The secondary objective was to assess one- and three-year implant survival of both fixation techniques.

Methods

We analyzed 10,862 cementless and 7,917 cemented UKA cases enrolled in the Dutch Arthroplasty Registry, operated between 2017 and 2021. Pre- to postoperative change in outcomes at six and 12 months’ follow-up were compared using mixed model analyses. Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression models were applied to quantify differences in implant survival. Adjustments were made for patient-specific variables and annual hospital volume.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 65 - 65
1 Oct 2018
Haas SB Premkumar A Lovecchio FC Stepan JG Koch CN Carroll KM Sculco PK Jerabek SA Della Valle AG Mayman DJ Pearle AD Alexiades MM Albert TJ Cross MB
Full Access

Introduction

Over the past few decades, opioid abuse has become a major threat to public health. In 2013 alone, enough opioid prescriptions were written in the United States for every American adult to have their own bottle of pills. Since then, opioid prescribing rates and opioid related deaths have continued to grow, with over 46 people dying on average each day from prescription opioid overdoses in 2016. Orthopaedic surgeons are among the top 5 specialties in the number of opioid prescriptions written. For many common surgeries, such as total knee arthroplasty (TKA), post-discharge prescriptions are based on prescriber habits and opinion. There exists limited data-driven protocols to guide post-operative opioid prescribing practices. The purpose of this prospective study was to determine the average postoperative opioid consumption in patients undergoing primary TKA using a novel mobile text messaging platform. We hypothesized that majority of patients undergoing TKA do not properly dispose of left over pills after surgery.

Methods

95 patients undergoing primary unilateral TKA with one of nine arthroplasty surgeons at a single orthopaedic specialty hospital were prospectively enrolled. Daily pain levels and opioid consumption, and quantity and disposal patterns for left over medications were collected for six weeks following surgery using a novel mobile phone text messaging system. This system automatically queried patients twice a day, storing responses on a secure third-party host that investigators monitored and used to generate data reports in real-time.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_28 | Pages 63 - 63
1 Aug 2013
Klingenstein G Cross M Plaskos C Li A Nam D Lyman S Pearle AD Mayman D
Full Access

Introduction

The aim of this study was to quantify mid-flexion laxity in a total knee arthroplasty with an elevated joint line, as compared to a native knee and a TKA with joint line maintained. Our hypothesis was joint line elevation of 4mm would increase coronal plane laxity throughout mid-flexion in a pattern distinct from the preoperative knee or in a TKA with native joint line.

Methods

Six fresh-frozen cadaver legs from hip-to-toe underwent TKA with a posterior stabilised implant (APEX PS, OMNIlife Science, Inc.) using a computer navigation system equipped with a robotic cutting-guide, in this controlled laboratory cadaveric study. After the initial tibial and femoral resections were performed, the flexion and extension gaps were balanced using navigation, and a 4mm recut was made in the distal femur. The remaining femoral cuts were made, the femoral component was downsized by resecting an additional 4mm of bone off the posterior condyles, and the polyethylene was increased by 4mm to create a situation of a well-balanced knee with an elevated joint line. The navigation system was used to measure overall coronal plane laxity by measuring the mechanical alignment angle at maximum extension, 30, 45, 60 and 90(of flexion, when applying a standardised varus/valgus load of 9.8Nm across the knee using a 4kg spring-load located at 25cm distal to the knee joint line. Laxity was also measured in the native knee, as well as the native knee after a standard approach during TKA which included a medial release. Coronal plane laxity was defined as the absolute difference (in degrees) between the mean mechanical alignment angle obtained from applying a standardised varus and valgus stress at 0, 30, 45, 60 and 90(.