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The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 6 | Pages 548 - 554
1 Jun 2024
Ohyama Y Minoda Y Masuda S Sugama R Ohta Y Nakamura H

Aims

The aim of this study was to compare the pattern of initial fixation and changes in periprosthetic bone mineral density (BMD) between patients who underwent total hip arthroplasty (THA) using a traditional fully hydroxyapatite (HA)-coated stem (T-HA group) and those with a newly introduced fully HA-coated stem (N-HA group).

Methods

The study included 36 patients with T-HA stems and 30 with N-HA stems. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry was used to measure the change in periprosthetic BMD, one and two years postoperatively. The 3D contact between the stem and femoral cortical bone was evaluated using a density-mapping system, and clinical assessment, including patient-reported outcome measurements, was recorded.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 13, Issue 4 | Pages 184 - 192
18 Apr 2024
Morita A Iida Y Inaba Y Tezuka T Kobayashi N Choe H Ike H Kawakami E

Aims

This study was designed to develop a model for predicting bone mineral density (BMD) loss of the femur after total hip arthroplasty (THA) using artificial intelligence (AI), and to identify factors that influence the prediction. Additionally, we virtually examined the efficacy of administration of bisphosphonate for cases with severe BMD loss based on the predictive model.

Methods

The study included 538 joints that underwent primary THA. The patients were divided into groups using unsupervised time series clustering for five-year BMD loss of Gruen zone 7 postoperatively, and a machine-learning model to predict the BMD loss was developed. Additionally, the predictor for BMD loss was extracted using SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP). The patient-specific efficacy of bisphosphonate, which is the most important categorical predictor for BMD loss, was examined by calculating the change in predictive probability when hypothetically switching between the inclusion and exclusion of bisphosphonate.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 2 | Pages 193 - 199
1 Feb 2022
Wang Q Wang H A G Xiao T Kang P

Aims. This study aimed to use intraoperative free electromyography to examine how the placement of a retractor at different positions along the anterior acetabular wall may affect the femoral nerve during total hip arthroplasty (THA) when undertaken using the direct anterior approach (THA-DAA). Methods. Intraoperative free electromyography was performed during primary THA-DAA in 82 patients (94 hips). The highest position of the anterior acetabular wall was defined as the “12 o’clock” position (middle position) when the patient was in supine position. After exposure of the acetabulum, a retractor was sequentially placed at the ten, 11, 12, one, and two o’clock positions (right hip; from superior to inferior positions). Action potentials in the femoral nerve were monitored with each placement, and the incidence of positive reactions (defined as explosive, frequent, or continuous action potentials, indicating that the nerve was being compressed) were recorded as the primary outcome. Secondary outcomes included the incidence of positive reactions caused by removing the femoral head, and by placing a retractor during femoral exposure; and the incidence of femoral nerve palsy, as detected using manual testing of the strength of the quadriceps muscle. Results. Positive reactions were significantly less frequent when the retractor was placed at the ten (15/94; 16.0%), 11 (12/94; 12.8%), or 12 o’clock positions (19/94; 20.2%), than at the one (37/94; 39.4%) or two o’clock positions (39/94; 41.5%) (p < 0.050). Positive reactions also occurred when the femoral head was removed (28/94; 29.8%), and when a retractor was placed around the proximal femur (34/94; 36.2%) or medial femur (27/94; 28.7%) during femoral exposure. After surgery, no patient had reduced strength in the quadriceps muscle. Conclusion. Placing the anterior acetabular retractor at the one or two o’clock positions (right hip; inferior positions) during THA-DAA can increase the rate of electromyographic signal changes in the femoral nerve. Thus, placing a retractor in these positions may increased the risk of the development of a femoral nerve palsy. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2022;104-B(2):193–199


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1514 - 1525
1 Sep 2021
Scott CEH Holland G Gillespie M Keenan OJ Gherman A MacDonald DJ Simpson AHRW Clement ND

Aims

The aims of this study were to investigate the ability to kneel after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) without patellar resurfacing, and its effect on patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). Secondary aims included identifying which kneeling positions were most important to patients, and the influence of radiological parameters on the ability to kneel before and after TKA.

Methods

This prospective longitudinal study involved 209 patients who underwent single radius cruciate-retaining TKA without patellar resurfacing. Preoperative EuroQol five-dimension questionnaire (EQ-5D), Oxford Knee Score (OKS), and the ability to achieve four kneeling positions were assessed including a single leg kneel, a double leg kneel, a high-flexion kneel, and a praying position. The severity of radiological osteoarthritis (OA) was graded and the pattern of OA was recorded intraoperatively. The flexion of the femoral component, posterior condylar offset, and anterior femoral offset were measured radiologically. At two to four years postoperatively, 151 patients with a mean age of 70.0 years (SD 9.44) were included. Their mean BMI was 30.4 kg/m2 (SD 5.36) and 60 were male (40%). They completed EQ-5D, OKS, and Kujala scores, assessments of the ability to kneel, and a visual analogue scale for anterior knee pain and satisfaction.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 10, Issue 8 | Pages 488 - 497
10 Aug 2021
Cleemann R Sorensen M West A Soballe K Bechtold JE Baas J

Aims

We wanted to evaluate the effects of a bone anabolic agent (bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP-2)) on an anti-catabolic background (systemic or local zoledronate) on fixation of allografted revision implants.

Methods

An established allografted revision protocol was implemented bilaterally into the stifle joints of 24 canines. At revision surgery, each animal received one BMP-2 (5 µg) functionalized implant, and one raw implant. One group (12 animals) received bone graft impregnated with zoledronate (0.005 mg/ml) before impaction. The other group (12 animals) received untreated bone graft and systemic zoledronate (0.1 mg/kg) ten and 20 days after revision surgery. Animals were observed for an additional four weeks before euthanasia.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 10, Issue 3 | Pages 173 - 187
1 Mar 2021
Khury F Fuchs M Awan Malik H Leiprecht J Reichel H Faschingbauer M

Aims

To explore the clinical relevance of joint space width (JSW) narrowing on standardized-flexion (SF) radiographs in the assessment of cartilage degeneration in specific subregions seen on MRI sequences in knee osteoarthritis (OA) with neutral, valgus, and varus alignments, and potential planning of partial knee arthroplasty.

Methods

We retrospectively reviewed 639 subjects, aged 45 to 79 years, in the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) study, who had symptomatic knees with Kellgren and Lawrence grade 2 to 4. Knees were categorized as neutral, valgus, and varus knees by measuring hip-knee-angles on hip-knee-ankle radiographs. Femorotibial JSW was measured on posteroanterior SF radiographs using a special software. The femorotibial compartment was divided into 16 subregions, and MR-tomographic measurements of cartilage volume, thickness, and subchondral bone area were documented. Linear regression with adjustment for age, sex, body mass index, and Kellgren and Lawrence grade was used.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 49 - 49
1 Mar 2021
Sasaki K Toshihiro S
Full Access

We report bone bruises on Anterior Cruciate Ligament (hereinafter referred to as ACL) injury. We also investigated the relationship among the presence or absence of bone bruises, localization, and the presence or absence of meniscal injury according to the period of MRI scan from injury. We underwent the study used a total of 76 knees who underwent ACL reconstruction at our hospital and related hospitals from January 2014 to December 2017. We investigated on MRI images taken after injury. Meniscal injuries were evaluated by intraoperative findings. The average age at injury was 25.8 years old (13–48 years old) in 44 males and 32 females. Bone bruises were found in 54 of 76 knees (71%). Among them, the ratio of non-contact type was much higher in the group with bone bruises than in the contact group (83% in the group with bone bruises, 64% in the group without bone bruises), resulting in a shorter period from injury to MRI (bone bruises group: 12.4 days, non-bone bruises group: 23 days). Looking at the appearance frequency of bone bruises according to the period from injury to MRI imaging, the appearance frequency of bone bruises decreased as the time to imaging became longer (within 2 weeks of injury: 76%, injury from 2 weeks to 1 month: 65%, injury 1–3 months: 53%). With regard to the localization of bone bruises, in the coronal section, both femurs and tibiae frequently had bone bruises on the outside. In the sagittal section, it occurred in front of the femur, in particular. On the tibial side, many cases of bone bruises occurred in the rear. In addition, the association between bone bruises and meniscal injuries were significantly complicated with lateral meniscal injury in the group without femoroconstriction in the group with lateral femoral bone bruises and in the group with posterior tibia bone bruises. There was no significant association between bone bruises and meniscal injury among the other groups. Bone bruises were found in 54 of 76 knees (71%). Regarding the occurrence of many lateral developments, it is thought that the tibia is sub-dislocated anteriorly due to mild flexion, valgus force, and external rotation injury, and injury is caused by axial pressure applied to the outside of the femur and posterior of the tibia It was done. As a result, it was considered that the external meniscal injury was injured. The medial unilateral development of bone contusion was observed in 3 knees on the medial femur and 1 knee on the medial tibia. All internal single-cased cases are contact-type injuries, the result of which may be different in the mechanism of bone contusion development


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 9, Issue 5 | Pages 37 - 41
1 Oct 2020


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 4 | Pages 530 - 538
1 Apr 2020
Rollick NC Gadinsky NE Klinger CE Kubik JF Dyke JP Helfet DL Wellman DS

Aims

Dual plating of distal femoral fractures with medial and lateral implants has been performed to improve construct mechanics and alignment, in cases where isolated lateral plating would be insufficient. This may potentially compromise vascularity, paradoxically impairing healing. This study investigates effects of single versus dual plating on distal femoral vascularity.

Methods

A total of eight cadaveric lower limb pairs were arbitrarily assigned to either 1) isolated lateral plating, or 2) lateral and medial plating of the distal femur, with four specimens per group. Contralateral limbs served as matched controls. Pre- and post-contrast MRI was performed to quantify signal intensity enhancement in the distal femur. Further evaluation of intraosseous vascularity was done with barium sulphate infusion with CT scan imaging. Specimens were then injected with latex medium and dissection was completed to assess extraosseous vasculature.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 3 | Pages 301 - 309
1 Mar 2020
Keenan OJF Holland G Maempel JF Keating JF Scott CEH

Aims

Although knee osteoarthritis (OA) is diagnosed and monitored radiologically, actual full-thickness cartilage loss (FTCL) has rarely been correlated with radiological classification. This study aims to analyze which classification system correlates best with FTCL and to assess their reliability.

Methods

A prospective study of 300 consecutive patients undergoing unilateral total knee arthroplasty (TKA) for OA (mean age 69 years (44 to 91; standard deviation (SD) 9.5), 178 (59%) female). Two blinded examiners independently graded preoperative radiographs using five common systems: Kellgren-Lawrence (KL); International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC); Fairbank; Brandt; and Ahlbäck. Interobserver agreement was assessed using the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Intraoperatively, anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) status and the presence of FTCL in 16 regions of interest were recorded. Radiological classification and FTCL were correlated using the Spearman correlation coefficient.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 107 - 107
1 Feb 2020
Holst D Doan G Angerame M Roche M Clary C Dennis D
Full Access

Background. Osteophytes in the posterior compartment of the knee pose a challenge in achieving soft tissue balance during total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Previous investigations have demonstrated the importance of various factors involved in obtaining flexion and extension gap balance, including the precision of femoral and tibial bone cuts as well as tensioning of the supporting pericapsular soft tissue structures (ligaments, capsule, etc.). However, the role of posterior compartment osteophytes has not been well studied. We hypothesize that space-occupying posterior structures affect soft tissue balance, especially in lesser degrees of flexion, in a cadaveric TKA model. Methods. Five cadaveric limbs were acquired. CT scans were obtained of each specimen to define the osseous contours. 3D printed specimen-specific synthetic osteophytes were fabricated in two sizes (10mm and 15mm). Posterior-stabilized TKAs were performed. Medial and lateral contact forces were measured during a passive range of motion using OrthoSensor ® (Dania Beach, FL) technology. For each specimen, trials were completed without osteophytes, and with 10mm and 15mm osteophytes applied to the posterior medial femur, with iterations at 0°, 10°, 30°, 45°, 60°, and 90° of flexion. These were recorded across each specimen in each condition for three trials. Tukey post hoc tests were used with a repeated measures ANOVA for statistical data analysis. Results. The presence of posterior medial osteophytes increased asymmetric loading from 0°– 45° of flexion. The 25–75% bounds of variability in the contact force was less than 3.5lbs. Conclusions. In this cadaveric TKA model, posterior femoral osteophytes caused an asymmetric increase in contact forces from full extension continuing into mid-flexion. To avoid unnecessary soft tissue releases, we recommend early removal of posterior femoral osteophytes prior to performing ligament releases to obtain desired soft tissue balance during TKA


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 7_Supple_C | Pages 33 - 39
1 Jul 2019
Lachiewicz PF O’Dell JA

Aims

There is insufficient evidence to recommend the use of alternative polyethylene bearings in modular, fixed-bearing total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The purpose of this study was to compare standard polyethylene (SP) and highly crosslinked polyethylene (XLP) tibial liners in posterior-stabilized TKA, with osteolysis as the primary outcome and clinical results and the rate of re-operation as the secondary outcomes.

Patients and Methods

This is a single-surgeon, prospective randomized study involving one design of modular posterior-stabilized TKA. An analysis of 122 TKAs with an SP compression moulded liner and 123 with an XLP liner was performed, with a mean follow-up of six years (2 to 11). Patients were evaluated clinically using the Knee Society score, Lower Extremity Activity Score (LEAS), and the presence of an effusion, and standard radiographs were assessed for radiolucent lines and osteolytic lesions.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 5, Issue 10 | Pages 500 - 511
1 Oct 2016
Raina DB Gupta A Petersen MM Hettwer W McNally M Tägil M Zheng M Kumar A Lidgren L

Objectives

We have observed clinical cases where bone is formed in the overlaying muscle covering surgically created bone defects treated with a hydroxyapatite/calcium sulphate biomaterial. Our objective was to investigate the osteoinductive potential of the biomaterial and to determine if growth factors secreted from local bone cells induce osteoblastic differentiation of muscle cells.

Materials and Methods

We seeded mouse skeletal muscle cells C2C12 on the hydroxyapatite/calcium sulphate biomaterial and the phenotype of the cells was analysed. To mimic surgical conditions with leakage of extra cellular matrix (ECM) proteins and growth factors, we cultured rat bone cells ROS 17/2.8 in a bioreactor and harvested the secreted proteins. The secretome was added to rat muscle cells L6. The phenotype of the muscle cells after treatment with the media was assessed using immunostaining and light microscopy.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 127 - 127
1 May 2016
Emmanuel K Wirth W Hochreiter J Eckstein F
Full Access

Purpose. It is well known that meniscus extrusion is associated with structural progression of knee OA. However, it is unknown whether medial meniscus extrusion promotes cartilage loss in specific femorotibial subregions, or whether it is associated with a increase in cartilage thickness loss throughout the entire femorotibial compartment. We applied quantitative MRI-based measurements of subregional cartilage thickness (change) and meniscus position, to address the above question in knees with and without radiographic joint space narrowing (JSN). Methods. 60 participants with unilateral medial OARSI JSN grade 1–3, and contralateral knee OARSI JSN grade 0 were drawn from the Osteoarthritis Initiative. Manual segmentation of the medial tibial and weight-bearing medial femoral cartilage was performed, using baseline and 1-year follow-up sagittal double echo steady-state (DESS) MRI, and proprietary software (Chondrometrics GmbH, Ainring, Germany). Segmentation of the entire medial meniscus was performed with the same software, using baseline coronal DESS images. Longitudinal cartilage loss was computed for 5 tibial (central, external, internal, anterior, posterior) and 3 femoral (central, external, internal) subregions. Meniscus position was determined as the % area of the entire meniscus extruding the tibial plateau medially and the distance between the external meniscus border and the tibial cartilage in an image located 4mm posterior to the central image (a location commonly used for semi-quantitative meniscus scoring). The relationship between meniscus position and cartilage loss was assessed using Pearson (r) correlation coefficients, for knees with JSN and without JSN. Results. The percentage of knees showing a quantitative value of >3mm medial meniscus extrusion was 50% in JSN knees, and only 12% in noJSN knees. The 1-year cartilage loss in the medial femorotibial compartment was 74±182µm (2.0%) in JSN knees, and 26±120µm (0.8%) in noJSN knees. There was a significant correlation between cartilage loss throughout the entire femorotibial compartment (MFTC) and extrusion area in JSN knees but not for noJSN knees. Also, the extrusion distance measured 4mm posterior to the central slice was not significantly correlated with MFTC cartilage loss. The strongest (negative) correlation between meniscus position and subregional femorotibial cartilage loss (r=−0.36) was observed for the external medial tibia. In contrast, no significant relationship was seen in the central tibia. No significant relationship was found in other tibial subregions, except for the anterior medial tibia, but only in JSN knees (r=−0.27). Correlation coefficients for the femoral subregions were generally smaller than those for tibial subregions, with only the internal medial weight-bearing femur attaining statistical significance (r =−0.26). Conclusions. The current results show that the relationship between meniscus extrusion and cartilage loss differs substantially between femorotibial subregions. The correlation was strongest for the external medial tibia, a region that is physiologically covered by the medial meniscus. It was less for other tibial and femoral subregions, including the central medial tibia, a region that exhibited similar rates of cartilage loss as the external subregion. The findings suggest that external tibia may be particularly vulnerable to cartilage tissue loss once the meniscus extrudes and the surface is “exposed” to direct, non-physiological, cartilage-cartilage contact


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 111 - 111
1 Jan 2016
Walsh W Bertollo N Hamze A Christou C Gao B Angibaud L
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Introduction. Biological fixation through bone ingrowth and ongrowth to implants can be achieved with a variety of surface treatments and technologies. This study evaluated the effect of two different three dimensional surface coatings for CoCr where porosity was controlled through the use of different geometry of CoCr beads in the sintering process. Methods. Test specimens in Group A were coated with conventional spherical porous-bead technology. The porous coating technology used on Group B was a variation of the conventional porous-bead technology. Instead of spherical beads, cobalt-chromium particles in irregular shapes were sieved for a particular size range, and were sintered onto the specimen substrate using similar process as Group A. The geometry and the size variation of the particles resulted in a unique 3D porous structure with widely interconnected pores. Three implants were placed bicortically in the tibia. Two implants were placed in the cancellous bone of the medial distal femur and proximal tibia bilaterally with 4 implantation conditions (2 mm gap, 1 mm gap line-to-line, and press fit). Animals were euthanized at 4 or 12 weeks for standard mechanical, histological and histomorphometric endpoints. Results. Shear strength increased with time for both groups (P<0.001). While no difference was detected between groups at the 4 week time point, the difference was statistically significant at 12 weeks with the irregular shaped beads using in the coating in group B providing a shear strength that outperformed the standard spherical beads. Histomorphometry revealed new bone ingrowth into the porous domains of both implant groups improved with time (P<0.001). Significantly greater (P<0.05) new bone integration was observed with the irregular shaped beads in the cortical as well as cancellous sites at 4 and 12 weeks (Figure 1). Discussion. Significant improvements can be made in the fixation strength of three dimensional CoCr coatings. This holds true in cortical implantation as well as different cancellous implantation scenarios. Material chemical composition of both coating and substrate conforms to ASTM F75 standard. The conventional sintered porous-bead technology in Group A provided a multi-layer porous structure at the bone implant interface has been well-established for the clinical use on TKA implants for over 15 years. This type of coating usually produces an average porosity of 30% to 40%, and an average pore size of 150 µm to 250 µm. The porous coating technology used on Group B was a variation of the conventional porous-bead technology. Instead of spherical beads, cobalt-chromium particles in irregular shapes were sieved for a particular size range, and were sintered onto the specimen substrate using similar process as Group A. Due to the geometry and the size variation of the particles, a true 3D porous structure with widely interconnected pores can be formed. Microstructure analysis on femoral implants showed that this coating technology is able to provide an average porosity of 50% to 70%, and an average pore size of 200 µm to 450 µm. This technology also produces a rougher coating surface appearance which could also play a potential role in the overall performance


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 9 - 9
1 Jan 2016
Goyal N Stulberg SD
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Introduction. Patient specific instrumentation (PSI) generates customized guides from an MRI- or CT-based preoperative plan for use in total knee arthroplasty (TKA). PSI software executes the preoperative planning process. Several manufacturers have developed proprietary PSI software for preoperative planning. It is possible that each proprietary software has a unique preoperative planning process, which may lead to variation in preoperative plans among manufactures and thus variation in the overall PSI technology. The purpose of this study was to determine whether different PSI software generate similar preoperative plans when applied to a single implant system and given identical MR images. Methods. In this prospective comparative study, we evaluated PSI preoperative plans generated by Materialise software and Zimmer Patient Specific Instruments software for 37 consecutive knees. All plans utilized the Zimmer Persona™ CR implant system and were approved by a single experienced surgeon blinded to the other software-generated preoperative plan. For each knee, the MRI reconstructions for both software programs were evaluated to qualitatively determine differences in bony landmark identification. The software-generated preoperative plans were assessed to determine differences in preoperative alignment, component sizes, and resection depth. PSI planned bone resection was compared to actual bone resection to assess the accuracy of intraoperative execution. Results. Materialise and Zimmer PSI software displayed differences in identification of bony landmarks in the femur and tibia. Zimmer software determined preoperative alignment to be 0.5° more varus (p=0.008) compared to Materialise software. Discordance in femoral component size prediction occurred in 37.8% of cases (p<0.001) with 11 cases differing by one size and 3 cases differing by two sizes. Tibial component size prediction was 32.4% discordant (p<0.001) with 12 cases differing by 1 size. In cases in which both software planned identical femoral component sizes, Zimmer software planned significantly more bone resection compared to Materialise in the medial posterior femur (1.5 mm, p<0.001) and lateral posterior femur (1.4 mm, p<0.001). Discussion. The present study suggests that there is notable variation in the PSI preoperative planning process of generating a preoperative plan from MR images. We found clinically significant differences with regard to bony landmark identification, component size selection, and predicted bone resection in the posterior femur between preoperative plans generated by two PSI software programs using identical MR images and a single implant system. Surgeons should be prepared to intraoperatively deviate from PSI selected size by 1 size. They should be aware that the inherent magnitude of error for PSI bone resection with regard to both planning and execution is within 2–3 mm. Users of PSI should acknowledge the variation in the preoperative planning process when using PSI software from different manufacturers. Manufacturers should continue to improve three-dimensional MRI reconstruction, bony landmark identification, preoperative alignment assessment, component size selection, and algorithms for bone resection in order to improve PSI preoperative planning process


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 3, Issue 6 | Pages 203 - 211
1 Jun 2014
Onur T Wu R Metz L Dang A

Objectives. Our objective in this article is to test the hypothesis that type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a factor in the onset and progression of osteoarthritis, and to characterise the quality of the articular cartilage in an appropriate rat model. Methods. T2DM rats were obtained from the UC Davis group and compared with control Lewis rats. The diabetic rats were sacrificed at ages from six to 12 months, while control rats were sacrificed at six months only. Osteoarthritis severity was determined via histology in four knee quadrants using the OARSI scoring guide. Immunohistochemical staining was also performed as a secondary form of osteoarthritic analysis. Results. T2DM rats had higher mean osteoarthritis scores than the control rats in each of the four areas that were analysed. However, only the results at the medial and lateral femur and medial tibia were significant. Cysts were also found in T2DM rats at the junction of the articular cartilage and subchondral bone. Immunohistochemical analysis does not show an increase in collagen II between control and T2DM rats. Mass comparisons also showed a significant relationship between mass and osteoarthritis score. Conclusions. T2DM was found to cause global degeneration in the UCD rat knee joints, suggesting that diabetes itself is a factor in the onset and progression of osteoarthritis. The immunohistochemistry stains showed little to no change in collagen II degeneration between T2DM and control rats. Overall, it seems that the animal model used is pertinent to future studies of T2DM in the development and progression of osteoarthritis. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2014;3:203–11


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 1 | Pages 137 - 142
1 Jan 2014
Nayagam S Davis B Thevendran G Roche AJ

We describe the technique and results of medial submuscular plating of the femur in paediatric patients and discuss its indications and limitations. Specifically, the technique is used as part of a plate-after-lengthening strategy, where the period of external fixation is reduced and the plate introduced by avoiding direct contact with the lateral entry wounds of the external fixator pins. The technique emphasises that vastus medialis is interposed between the plate and the vascular structures.

A total of 16 patients (11 male and five female, mean age 9.6 years (5 to 17)), had medial submuscular plating of the femur. All underwent distraction osteogenesis of the femur with a mean lengthening of 4.99 cm (3.2 to 12) prior to plating. All patients achieved consolidation of the regenerate without deformity. The mean follow-up was 10.5 months (7 to 15) after plating for those with plates still in situ, and 16.3 months (1 to 39) for those who subsequently had their plates removed. None developed a deep infection. In two patients a proximal screw fractured without loss of alignment; one patient sustained a traumatic fracture six months after removal of the plate.

Placing the plate on the medial side is advantageous when the external fixator is present on the lateral side, and is biomechanically optimal in the presence of a femoral defect. We conclude that medial femoral submuscular plating is a useful technique for specific indications and can be performed safely with a prior understanding of the regional anatomy.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014;96-B:137–42.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_34 | Pages 252 - 252
1 Dec 2013
Buechel F
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Introduction:. Unicompartmental knee arthroplasty has been shown to have lower morbidity, quicker rehabilitation and more normal kinematics compared to conventional TKA, but subchondral defects, or severe osteoarthritic changes, of the medial compartment may complicate component positioning. Successful UKA in these patients requires proper planning and exact placement of the components to ensure adequate and stable fixation and proper postoperative kinematics. This study presents a series of three patients with spontaneous osteonecrosis of the knee receiving a UKA with CT-based haptic robotic guidance. Methods:. This series includes two females and one male with spontaneous osteonecrosis of the medial femoral condyle who underwent outpatient mini-incision medial UKA using the MAKO Surgical Rio Robotic Arm System. Pre-operatively all patients were found to have pain with weight bearing that would not improve despite non-arthroplasty treatment. Results:. The first patient was a 69 year old female (BMI of 22.85) with a left medial femur size 3, tibia size 4, bearing size 4×8 mm. The patient improved her ROM from 3–112° pre-operatively to 0–130° at 18 months post-operatively. The second patient was a 69 year old female (BMI of 25.68) with a right medial size 2 femur and 3 tibia and a 3×9 mm bearing. ROM increased from 0–120° pre-operatively to 0–145° at 2 year follow-up. The third patient was a 74 year old male (BMI of 26.5) who underwent previous knee arthroscopy with subsequent SPONK. Conclusion:. The difficulty in treatment of SPONK with UKA solutions includes planning for the full coverage of the ON lesions while also addressing alignment, tracking and balancing needs simultaneously. Using the advanced planning tools of the MAKO Rio software, full coverage of ON lesions can be safely planned and verified preoperatively. The intraoperative flexibility of the system allows surgeon to map out the lesions intraoperatively, where visible, and aid in the proper implant positioning and size adjustment as necessary


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 95-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1204 - 1208
1 Sep 2013
Kerens B Boonen B Schotanus MGM Lacroix H Emans PJ Kort NP

Although it has been suggested that the outcome after revision of a unicondylar knee replacement (UKR) to total knee replacement (TKR) is better when the mechanism of failure is understood, a comparative study on this subject has not been undertaken.

A total of 30 patients (30 knees) who underwent revision of their unsatisfactory UKR to TKR were included in the study: 15 patients with unexplained pain comprised group A and 15 patients with a defined cause for pain formed group B. The Oxford knee score (OKS), visual analogue scale for pain (VAS) and patient satisfaction were assessed before revision and at one year after revision, and compared between the groups.

The mean OKS improved from 19 (10 to 30) to 25 (11 to 41) in group A and from 23 (11 to 45) to 38 (20 to 48) in group B. The mean VAS improved from 7.7 (5 to 10) to 5.4 (1 to 8) in group A and from 7.4 (2 to 9) to 1.7 (0 to 8) in group B. There was a statistically significant difference between the mean improvements in each group for both OKS (p = 0.022) and VAS (p = 0.002). Subgroup analysis in group A, performed in order to define a patient factor that predicts outcome of revision surgery in patients with unexplained pain, showed no pre-operative differences between both subgroups.

These results may be used to inform patients about what to expect from revision surgery, highlighting that revision of UKR to TKR for unexplained pain generally results in a less favourable outcome than revision for a known cause of pain.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2013;95-B:1204–8.