Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 1 - 4 of 4
Results per page:
Applied filters
Content I can access

Include Proceedings
Dates
Year From

Year To
Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 130 - 130
1 Mar 2017
Ryu K Iriuchishima T Saito S Nagaoka M Ryu J Tokuhashi Y
Full Access

Introduction

Oriental people habitually adopt formal sitting and squatting postures, the extreme flexion of the knees allowing of this. The influence exercised by pressure and posture are, therefore, found at the posterior side of knee joint. However, we don't have many report about articular cartilage of posterior femoral condyle.

Objectives

The purpose of this study was to reveal the accurate prevalence and related factors to the presence of degenerative changing of the articular cartilage of posterior femoral condyle in cadaveric knee joints.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 27 - 27
1 Feb 2017
Iriuchishima T Ryu K
Full Access

Purpose

the purpose of this study was to compare the rollback ratio in the bi-cruciate substituting BCS-TKA and the Oxford UKA.

Methods

20 subjects (28 knees) who were performed the BCS-TKA (Journey II: Smith and Nephew) and 24 subjects (29 knees) who were performed the Oxford UKA, were included in this study. Approximately 6 months after surgery, and when the subjects recovered their range of knee motion, following the Laidlow's method (The knee 2010), lateral radiographic imaging of the knee was performed with active full knee flexion. The most posterior tibiofemoral contact point was measured for evaluation of femoral rollback (Rollback ratio). Flexion angle was also measured using the same radiograph and the correlation of rollback and flexion angle was analyzed. As a control, radiographs of the contralateral knees of who were performed Oxford UKA were evaluated (29 knees).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 141 - 141
1 Jan 2016
Ryu K Suzuki T Iriuchishima T Kojima K Saito S Ishii T Nagaoka M Tokuhashi Y
Full Access

Objective

Mobile bearing unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) is an effective and safe treatment for osteoarthritis of the medial compartment. However, mobile-bearing UKA needs accurate ligament balancing of flexion and extension gaps to prevent dislocation of the mobile meniscal bearing. Instability can lead to dislocation of the insert. The phase 3 instruments of the Oxford UKA use a balancing technique for the flexion gap (90° of flexion) and extension gap (20° of flexion), thereby focusing attention on satisfactory soft tissue balancing. With this technique, spacers are used to balance the flexion and extension gap. However, gap kinematics in another flexion angle of mobile-bearing UKA is unclear. We developed UKA tensor for mobile-bearing UKA and we assessed the accurate gap kinematics of UKA.

Materials and Methods

Between 2012 and 2013, The Phase 3 Oxford Partial Knee UKA (Biomet Inc., Warsaw, IN) were carried out in 48 patients (71 knees) for unicompartmental knee osteoarthritis or spontaneous osteonecrosis of the medial compartment. The mean age of patients at surgery was 71.6 years and the mean follow-up period was 1.7 years. The mean preoperative coronal plane alignment was 7.4° in varus. The indications for UKA included disabling knee pain with medial compartment disease; intact ACL and collateral ligaments; preoperative contracture of less than 15°; and preoperative deformity of <15°. Each surgery was performed by using different spacer block with 1-mm increments and the meniscal bearing lift-off tests according to surgical technique. We developed newly tensor for mobile bearing UKA which designed to permit surgeons to measure multiple range of the joint medial compartment/joint component gap, while applying a constant joint distraction force (Figure 1). We assessed the intra-operative joint gap measurements at 0, 20, 60, 90 and 120 of flexion with 100N, 125N and 150N of joint distraction forces.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_34 | Pages 543 - 543
1 Dec 2013
Suzuki T Ryu K Yamada T Kojima K Saito S Tokuhashi Y
Full Access

Introduction

Accurate soft tissue balancing in knee arthroplasty is essential in order to attain good postoperative clinical results. In mobile-bearing UKA (Oxford Partial Knee unicompartmental knee arthroplasty, Biomet), since determination of the thickness of the spacer block depends on the individual surgeon, it will vary and it will be difficult to attain appropriate knee balancing. The first objective of the present study was to investigate flexion and extension medial unicompartmental knee gap kinematics in conjunction with various joint distraction forces. The second objective of the study was to investigate the accuracy of gap measurement using a spacer block and a tensor device.

Methods

A total of 40 knees in 31 subjects (5 men and 26 women) with a mean age of 71.5 years underwent Oxford UKA for knee osteoarthritis and idiopathic osteonecrosis of the medial compartment. According to instructions of Phase 3 Oxford UKA, spacer block technique was used to make the extension gap equal to the flexion gap. Adequate thickness of the spacer block was determined so that the surgeon could easily insert and remove it with no stress. Following osteotomy, the tensor devise was used to measure the medial compartmental gap between the femoral trial prosthesis and the tibial osteotomy surface (joint component gap) (Fig. 1 and 2). The medial gap was measured at 20° of knee flexion (extension gap) and 90° of knee flexion (flexion gap) with 25N, 50N, 75N, 100N, 125N, 150N of joint distraction force. Corresponding size of bearing was determined for the prosthesis. The interplay gap was calculated by subtracting the thickness of the tibial prosthesis and the thickness of the selected size of bearing from the measured extension and flexion gaps.