This study addresses a crucial gap in the knowledge of normative spinal growth in children. The objective of this study is to provide detailed and accurate 3D reference values for global and segmental spinal dimensions in healthy children under the age of 11. Radiographic spine examinations of healthy children conducted to rule out scoliosis were reviewed in four scoliosis referral centers in North America. All consecutive children aged three to eleven years old with EOS biplanar good quality x-rays, but without diagnosed growth-affecting pathologies, were included. Postero-Anterior and Lateral calibrated x-rays were used for spine 3D reconstruction and computation of vertebral body height and spine length. Median and interquartile range were calculated from cross-sectional data. Smooth centiles growth curves for 3D True Spinal Length (3DTSL) between T1 and S1, as well as for mid-vertebral heights of T5, T12 and L3, where fit and calibrated from data using the Lambda-Mu-Sigma method (GAMLSS package for R). This method automatically selects the best performing distribution from a familly of choices. Tables of centiles were then predicted from the computed models for selected ages. A total of 638 full spine examinations from asymptomatic patients were reconstructed in 3D, 397 in girls and 241 in boys. Medians and interquartile ranges were calculated for 3DTSL (T1-S1): 285 (24) mm, 314 (26) mm and 349 (31) mm, and for selected vertebral heights T5: 10 (1) mm, 11 (1) mm and 12 (1) mm, T12: 13 (2) mm, 14 (1) mm and 16 (2) mm, and L3: 14 (1) mm, 16 (2) mm and 18 (2) mm, respectively for the 3–6, 6–8 and 8–11 age groups. Centile curves ready for clinical use of the 3DTSL (T1-S1) and of the vertebral heights of T5, T12 and L3 as a function of age were derived for the 5, 10, 25, 50, 75, 90 and 95th centiles. In general, boys presented linear relationships between spinal dimensions and age, and girls presented more diverging trends with increased variance for older ages. Accordingly curves for boys follow the Normal distribution whereas those for girls follow the original Box-Cox-Cole-Green distribution. Model diagnostic tests (normally distributed residuals, adequate wormplots and |Z statistics| < 2) confirmed adequacy of the models and the absence of significant misfit. Accurate reference values were derived for spinal dimensions in healthy children. Spinal dimension charts showed that the spinal lengths and vertebral heights changed relatively constantly across the age groups closely resembling WHO total body height charts. The reference values will help physicians better assess their patients' growth potential. It could also be used to predict expected spinal dimensions at maturity or changes in pathologic conditions as well as to assess the impact of growth friendly interventions in the correction of spinal deformities.
Resistant organisms are difficult to eradicate in infected total knee arthroplasty, and treatment of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is especially challenging. Whereas most surgeons use antibiotic-impregnated cement during revision to treat infection, the delivery of the drug in adequate doses is limited in penetration and duration. This study presents the 2- to 8-year prospective results of one-stage revision and intraarticular antibiotic infusion protocol used to treat MRSA. Eighteen knees (18 patients) with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus were treated between January 2001 and January 2007 with one-stage revision protocol that included débridement, uncemented revision of total knee components, and intraarticular infusion of 500 mg vancomycin via Hickman catheter once or twice daily for 6 weeks. (Figure 1) No intravenous antibiotics were used after the first 24 hours. Serum vancomycin levels were monitored to maintain levels between 3 and 10 μg/mL. The mean serum vancomycin peak concentration was 6 ± 2 μg/mL and the mean serum vancomycin trough concentration was 3 ± 1 μg/mL at 2 weeks postoperative.Introduction
Methods
Recent clinical studies found no apparent reduction in wear using yttria-stabilized zirconia (Y-TZP) instead of cobalt chromium alloy femoral heads bearing against cross-linked UHMWPE. The purpose of this study was to compare the surface topography of retrieved Y-TZP and magnesia-stabilized zirconia (Mg-PSZ) femoral heads and evaluate the influence of time Y-TZP (n = 18) and Mg-PSZ (n = 17) femoral heads were retrieved from revision THA. Heads were cleaned and scanned by optical profilometry (magnification = 10x) at three locations per specimen. After subtracting the curvature of the heads, roughness statistics (Sa, Ssk) were calculated and averaged for each specimen and then correlated to age Introduction
Materials and Methods
Risser sign of 0 or 1 Cobb angle between 11 and 40 degrees AP and lateral radiograph available. Exclusion criteria were
limb length discrepancy syndromic or congenital scoliosis. All spines were reconstructed in 3D with AP and lateral radiographs of the first visit and measurements were performed on the reconstruction. There were 4 categories of measurements done: Cobb angle, wedging, rotation, slenderness. Student t test were performed.
Custom SNP pools were designed for the candidate regions at a density of 1 SNP/58Kb. DNA from 550 individuals (AD group) were genotyped using the Illumina platform. A total of 1536 SNP markers were attempted, of which 1324 were released; 519 SNPs were genotyped on 9q32-24 and 805 SNPs genotyped on 16p12-q22. The map was generated using NCBI dbSNP chromosome report on Build 34. Overall missing rate was 0.06%; the overall duplicate error rate was 0.05%. FIS was analysed both as a qualitative trait with an arbitrary threshold, and as a quantitative trait, or the degree of lateral curvature. Model independent sib-pair linkage analysis was performed on the subsets (SIBPAL, S. A. G. E. v4.5).
Chromosome 9: Multipoint model-independent qualitative analysis (threshold at ten degrees) did not result in any p values of <
0.05. When the threshold was set at 30 degrees, several regions with p values of <
0.005 were observed. One region spanned 10 Mb, and coincides with the region found to be most suggestive of linkage at the 0.05 level for the quantitative analysis which was 6 Mb in length. Chromosome 16: Multipoint model-independent qualitative analysis (threshold at ten degrees) resulted in a region spanning 23Mb with p values of <
0.05. The region included both regions adjacent to the centromere. When analysis was performed at a threshold of 30 degrees, the p values became more significant within a region of 30 Mb significant at the 0.05 level. The region best defined at a 0.01 level was located in an 8 Mb region on the q arm.