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The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 3 | Pages 240 - 248
1 Mar 2024
Kim SE Kwak J Ro DH Lee MC Han H

Aims. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether achieving medial joint opening, as measured by the change in the joint line convergence angle (∆JLCA), is a better predictor of clinical outcomes after high tibial osteotomy (HTO) compared with the mechanical axis deviation, and to find individualized targets for the redistribution of load that reflect bony alignment, joint laxity, and surgical technique. Methods. This retrospective study analyzed 121 knees in 101 patients. Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) were collected preoperatively and one year postoperatively, and were analyzed according to the surgical technique (opening or closing wedge), postoperative mechanical axis deviation (deviations above and below 10% from the target), and achievement of medial joint opening (∆JLCA > 1°). Radiological parameters, including JLCA, mechanical axis deviation, and the difference in JLCA between preoperative standing and supine radiographs (JLCA. PD. ), an indicator of medial soft-tissue laxity, were measured. Cut-off points for parameters related to achieving medial joint opening were calculated from receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. Results. Patients in whom the medial joint opening was achieved had significantly better postoperative PROMs compared with those without medial opening (all p < 0.05). Patients who were outliers with deviation of > 10% from the target mechanical axis deviation had significantly similar PROMs compared with patients with an acceptable axis deviation (all p > 0.05). Medial joint opening was affected by postoperative mechanical axis deviation and JLCA. PD. The influence of JLCA. PD. on postoperative axis deviation was more pronounced in a closing wedge than in an opening wedge HTO. Conclusion. Medial joint opening rather than the mechanical axis deviation determined the clinical outcome in patients who underwent HTO. The JLCA. PD. identified the optimal postoperative axis deviation necessary to achieve medial joint opening. For patients with increased laxity, lowering the target axis deviation is recommended to achieve medial joint opening. The target axis deviation should also differ according to the technique of undergoing HTO. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2024;106-B(3):240–248


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 111 - 111
2 Jan 2024
Wong S Lee K Razak H
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Medial opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (MOWHTO) is the workhorse procedure for correcting varus malalignment of the knee. There have been recent developments in the synthetic options to fill the osteotomy gap. The current gold standard for filling this osteotomy gap is autologous bone graft which is associated with donor site morbidity. We would like to introduce and describe the process of utilizing the novel Osteopore® 3D printed, honeycomb structured, Polycaprolactone and β-Tricalcium Phosphate wedge for filling the gap in MOWHTO. In the advent of additive manufacturing and the quest for more biocompatible materials, the usage of the Osteopore® bone wedge in MOWHTO is a promising technique that may improve the biomechanical stability as well the healing of the osteotomy gap


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1099 - 1107
1 Oct 2023
Henry JK Shaffrey I Wishman M Palma Munita J Zhu J Cody E Ellis S Deland J Demetracopoulos C

Aims

The Vantage Total Ankle System is a fourth-generation low-profile fixed-bearing implant that has been available since 2016. We aimed to describe our early experience with this implant.

Methods

This is a single-centre retrospective review of patients who underwent primary total ankle arthroplasty (TAA) with a Vantage implant between November 2017 and February 2020, with a minimum of two years’ follow-up. Four surgeons contributed patients. The primary outcome was reoperation and revision rate of the Vantage implant at two years. Secondary outcomes included radiological alignment, peri-implant complications, and pre- and postoperative patient-reported outcomes.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 9 - 9
7 Aug 2023
Mabrouk A Ollivier M
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Abstract. Introduction. Changes in posterior tibial slope (PTS) and patellar height (PH) following proximal tibial osteotomies have been a recent focus for knee surgeons. Increased PTS and decreased PH following medial opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (MOWHTO) have been repeatedly reported in the literature. However, this has been disputed in more recent biomechanical studies. Methodology. A total of 62 cases who underwent MOWHTO were included. Surgery was performed using a dedicated step-by-step protocol focusing on the risks of unintentional slope changes. Clinically, all patients were evaluated preoperatively and at 2 years follow-up with the KOOS scores and UCLA physical activity scale. Preoperative and postoperative radiographic lower limb alignment parameters were measured on full-length lower limb radiographs, including (HKA), (MPTA), (mLDFA), proximal posterior tibial angle (PPTA), (JLCA) and(JLO). PH measurements were assessed on radiographs. Results. There was a significant change in the coronal plane alignment; the mMPTA changed from 84.38° to 90.39°, and the HKA changed from 172.19° to 180.15° (Both P < 0.0001). There was no significant change in the PTS as evidenced by a postoperative PPTA of 80.56 ° from a preoperative of 80.36°. And no significant change in the PH with all the indices; preoperative Caton Deschamps, Insall Salvati, and Schröter indices measured 0.95, 1.03, and 1.56, respectively. In comparison to postoperative measures of 0.93, 1.03, and 1.54, respectively. Conclusion. MOWHTO does not change the PTS or PH when accurate preoperative planning and precise intraoperative freehand technique are adopted. Involuntary modification of these anatomic parameters should be considered surgical errors


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 55 - 55
7 Aug 2023
Wright E Andrews N Thakrar R Chatoo M
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Abstract. Introduction. Osteotomy is recognised treatment for osteoarthritis of the knee. Evidence suggests favourable outcomes when compared to arthroplasty, for younger and more active individuals[1]. Double level osteotomy (DLO) is considered when a single level is insufficient to restore both joint line obliquity and adequate realignment[2]. This paper aims to establish the functional outcomes up to two years post operatively for patients undergoing DLO, using patient reported outcome measures (PROMs). Methodology. All patients who underwent a DLO at either Lister Hospital, Stevenage, or One Hatfield Hospital, Hertfordshire, between 1st January 2018 and 1st October 2020 were identified. DLO were performed by two specialist consultants, independently or in combination. PROMs including pain scores, health score, Oxford knee score (OKS) and knee injury and osteoarthritis outcome score (KOOS) were recorded pre-operatively and at six month, one and two year post operative intervals. Results. 24 patients underwent DLO; a medial opening wedge high tibial osteotomy and lateral closing wedge distal femoral osteotomy. The cohort comprised 21 males, 3 females with an average age of 54.09 (38–77) years. Preoperative pain scores graded from 0–10 improved from 6.86 to 2.0 at 2 years. OKS improved from 23.94 to 47.88, as did KOOS 43.55 to 87.51, over the same duration. Conclusion. DLO was associated with improvements in pain and functional outcomes, compared to pre-operative levels. In patients for whom arthroplasty may be unfavourable, this provides an alternative to non-operative management, the options for which are frequently exhausted early in the disease process


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 40 - 40
1 Jun 2023
Al-Omar H Patel K Lahoti O
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Introduction. Angular deformities of the distal femur can be corrected by opening, closing and neutral wedge techniques. Opening wedge (OW) and closing wedge (CW) are popular and well described in the literature. CW and OW techniques lead to leg length difference whereas the advantage of neutral wedge (NW) technique has several unique advantages. NW technique maintains limb length, wedge taken from the closing side is utilised on the opening side and since the angular correction is only half of the measured wedge on either side, translation of distal fragment is minimum. Leg lengths are not altered with this technique hence a useful technique in large deformities. We found no reports of clinical outcomes using NW technique. We present a technique of performing external fixator assisted NW correction of large valgus and varus deformities of distal femur and dual plating and discuss the results. Materials & Methods. We have treated 20 (22 limbs – 2 patients requiring staged bilateral corrections) patients for distal femoral varus and valgus deformities with CWDFO between 2019 and 2022. Out of these 4 patients (5 limbs) requiring large corrections of distal femoral angular deformities were treated with Neutral Wedge (NW) technique. 3 patients (four limbs) had distal femoral valgus deformity and one distal femoral varus deformity. Indication for NW technique is an angular deformity (varus or valgus of distal femur) requiring > 12 mm opening/closing wedge correction. We approached the closing side first and marked out the half of the calculated wedge with K – wires in a uniplanar fashion. Then an external fixator with two Schanz screws is applied on the opposite side, inserting the distal screw parallel to the articular surface and the proximal screw 6–7 cm proximal to the first pin and at right angles to the femoral shaft mechanical axis. Then the measured wedge is removed and carefully saved. External fixator is now used to close the wedge and over correct, creating an appropriate opening wedge on the opposite side. A Tomofix (Depuoy Synthes) plate is applied on the closing side with two screws proximal to osteotomy and two distally (to be completed later). Next the osteotomy on the opposite side is exposed, the graft is inserted. mLDFA is measured under image intensifier to confirm satisfactory correction. Closing wedge side fixation is then completed followed by fixation of opposite side with a Tomofix or a locking plate. Results. 3 patients (4 limbs) had genu valgum due to constitutional causes and one was a case of distal femoral varus from a fracture. Preoperative mLDFA ranged from 70–75° and in one case of varus deformity it was 103°. We achieved satisfactory correction of mLDFA in (85–90°) in 4 limbs and one measured 91°. Femoral length was not altered. JLCA was not affected post correction. Patients were allowed to weight bear for transfers for the first six weeks and full weight bearing was allowed at six weeks with crutches until healing of osteotomy. All osteotomies healed at 16–18 weeks (average 16.8 weeks). Patients regained full range of movement. We routinely recommend removal of metal work to facilitate future knee replacement if one is needed. Follow up ranged from 4 months to 2 yrs. Irritation from metal work was noted in 2 patients and resolved after removing the plates at 9 months post-surgery. Conclusions. NWDFO is a good option for large corrections. We describe a technique that facilitates accurate correction of deformity in these complex cases. Osteotomy heals predictably with uniplanar osteotomy and dual plate fixation. Metal work might cause irritation like other osteotomy and plating techniques in this location


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 5 | Pages 474 - 480
1 May 2023
Inclan PM Brophy RH

Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) graft failure from rupture, attenuation, or malposition may cause recurrent subjective instability and objective laxity, and occurs in 3% to 22% of ACL reconstruction (ACLr) procedures. Revision ACLr is often indicated to restore knee stability, improve knee function, and facilitate return to cutting and pivoting activities. Prior to reconstruction, a thorough clinical and diagnostic evaluation is required to identify factors that may have predisposed an individual to recurrent ACL injury, appreciate concurrent intra-articular pathology, and select the optimal graft for revision reconstruction. Single-stage revision can be successful, although a staged approach may be used when optimal tunnel placement is not possible due to the position and/or widening of previous tunnels. Revision ACLr often involves concomitant procedures such as meniscal/chondral treatment, lateral extra-articular augmentation, and/or osteotomy. Although revision ACLr reliably restores knee stability and function, clinical outcomes and reoperation rates are worse than for primary ACLr.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2023;105-B(5):474–480.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 60 - 60
4 Apr 2023
MacLeod A Mandalia V Mathews J Toms A Gill H
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High tibial osteotomy (HTO) is an effective surgical treatment for isolated medial compartment knee osteoarthritis; however, widespread adoption is limited due to difficulty in achieving the planned correction, and patient dissatisfaction due to soft tissue irritation. A new HTO system – Tailored Osteotomy Knee Alignment (TOKA®, 3D Metal Printing Ltd, Bath, UK) could potentially address these barriers having a custom titanium plate and titanium surgical guides featuring a unique mechanism for precise osteotomy opening as well as saw cutting and drilling guides. The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy of this novel HTO system using cadaveric specimens; a preclinical testing stage ahead of first-in-human surgery according to the ‘IDEAL-D’ framework for device innovation. Local ethics committee approval was obtained. The novel opening wedge HTO procedure was performed on eight cadaver leg specimens. Whole lower limb CT scans pre- and post-operatively provided geometrical assessment quantifying the discrepancy between pre-planned and post-operative measurements for key variables: the gap opening angle and the patient specific surgical instrumentation positioning and rotation - assessed using the implanted plate. The average discrepancy between the pre-operative plan and the post-operative osteotomy correction angle was: 0.0 ± 0.2°. The R2 value for the regression correlation was 0.95. The average error in implant positioning was −0.4 ± 4.3 mm, −2.6 ± 3.4 mm and 3.1 ± 1.7° vertically, horizontally, and rotationally respectively. This novel HTO surgery has greater accuracy and smaller variability in correction angle achieved compared to that reported for conventional or other patient specific methods with published data available. This system could potentially improve the accuracy and reliability of osteotomy correction angles achieved surgically


Aims

The use of high tibial osteotomy (HTO) to delay total knee arthroplasty (TKA) in young patients with osteoarthritis (OA) and constitutional deformity remains debated. The aim of this study was to compare the long-term outcomes of TKA after HTO compared to TKA without HTO, using the time from the index OA surgery as reference (HTO for the study group, TKA for the control group).

Methods

This was a case-control study of consecutive patients receiving a posterior-stabilized TKA for OA between 1996 and 2010 with previous HTO. A total of 73 TKAs after HTO with minimum ten years’ follow-up were included. Cases were matched with a TKA without previous HTO for age at the time of the HTO. All revisions were recorded. Kaplan-Meier survivorship analysis was performed using revision of metal component as the endpoint. The Knee Society Score, range of motion, and patient satisfaction were assessed.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 52 - 52
1 Jul 2022
Kurien T East J Mandalia V
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Abstract. Introduction. To investigate the impact medial opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (MOWHTO) has on the progression of patellofemoral OA, patella height and contact pressure within the patellofemoral joint (PF). Methods. A systematic review was conducted in January 2022 according to PRISMA guidelines. Each study was graded as per the MINORS criteria for non-randomised trials. The ICRS cartilage grade of the PF joint at the initial MOWHTO surgery and at second look surgery was compared and relative risk of progression of PF OA was calculated. Evaluation of patella height was assessed by Caton-Deschamps index, Blackburne-Peel index or Insall-Salvati ratio pre and post MOWHTO. Cadaveric studies assessing contact pressures in the PF after MOWHTO were included. Results. Forty-two studies comparing 2,419 patients were included. The mean age was 53.1 years (16–84), 61.3% female. The risk of progression of PF OA was highest in the uniplanar and biplanar MOWHTO with proximal tubercle osteotomy groups (RR= 1.28-1.51, I2= 0%), compared to biplanar MOHWTO with distal tubercle osteotomy (RR= 0.96-1.04, I2 = 0%). Patella height was not affected after biplanar MOWHTO and distal tubercle osteotomy. (P<0.001). Cadaveric studies demonstrate that PF contact pressures increase with more severe corrections (10°) but suggest biplanar MWOHTO and distal tubercle osteotomy induces lower contact pressures within the PF joint than other OWHTO techniques. Conclusion. This novel systematic review demonstrates that biplanar MOWHTO and distal tubercle osteotomy causes lower contact pressures in the PF joint, less severe progression of PF OA and has minimal impact on patella height


Abstract. Design. A pragmatic, multicentre, parallel-group, randomised controlled trial to determine whether the intervention is superior to comparator. Setting. 20 NHS Hospitals. Population. NHS patients <60 years with moderate-severe symptomatic knee OA localised to the medial compartment in whom surgical intervention is indicated. Intervention. Surgery with medial opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (HTO) followed by standard postoperative rehabilitation based on local pathways. Comparator. Tailored non-surgical intervention delivered within an NHS physiotherapy department delivered over 6-contact sessions within a period of 4 months. Outcomes. Primary outcome - 24-month Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS); Secondary outcomes - OKS, FJS-12, EQ-5D-3L, Pittsburgh Sleep Problem Scale, Return to Work, secondary surgical interventions and complications at 12 and 24 months following randomisation. Health economic evaluation - 24-month within trial analysis, and a decision analytic simulation model to account for the impacts of future knee replacements (and associated revisions), and their timing relative to retirement and employment potential. Process evaluation – to explore trial eligibility, recruitment and retention rates, acceptability of intervention implementation and patient experience of taking part/contextual factors that influence this. Follow up. 12 months and 24 months post-randomisation. Sample size. 224 patients; (90% power, 2-sided p=0.05, equivalent to a sample size of 97 per group). Allowing for 15% loss to follow up, 112 patients will be recruited to each arm of the trial. Project timelines. Start date 1 August 2022, total project duration 60 months including a 9-month, 5-site internal pilot, with a recruitment rate of 0.7 patients/site/month


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 6 | Pages 657 - 662
1 Jun 2022
Barlow T Coco V Shivji F Grassi A Asplin L Thompson P Metcalfe A Zaffagnini S Spalding T

Aims

Meniscal allograft transplantation (MAT) for patients with symptomatic meniscal loss has demonstrated good clinical results and survivorship. Factors that affect both functional outcome and survivorship have been reported in the literature. These are typically single-centre case series with relatively small numbers and conflicting results. Our aim was to describe an international, two-centre case series, and identify factors that affect both functional outcome and survival.

Methods

We report factors that affect outcome on 526 patients undergoing MAT across two sites (one in the UK and one in Italy). Outcomes of interest were the Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score four (KOOS4) at two years and failure rates. We performed multiple regression analysis to examine for factors affecting KOOS, and Cox proportional hazards models for survivorship.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 19 - 19
1 Apr 2022
Tsang SJ Stirling P Simpson H
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Introduction. Distal femoral and proximal tibial osteotomies are effective procedures to treat degenerative disease of the knee joint. Previously described techniques advocate the use of bone graft to promote healing at the osteotomy site. In this present study a novel technique which utilises the osteogenic potential of the cambial periosteal layer to promote healing “from the outside in” is described. Materials and Methods. A retrospective analysis of a consecutive single-surgeon series of 23 open wedge osteotomies around the knee was performed. The median age of the patients was 37 years (range 17–51 years). The aetiology of the deformities included primary genu valgum (8/23), fracture malunion (4/23), multiple epiphyseal dysplasia (4/23), genu varum (2/23), hypophosphataemic rickets (1/23), primary osteoarthritis (1/23), inflammatory arthropathy (1/23), post-polio syndrome (1/23), and pseudoachondroplasia (1/23). Results. There were two cases lost to follow-up with a median follow-up period 17 months (range 1–32 months). Union was achieved in all cases, with 1/23 requiring revision for early fixation failure for technical reasons. The median time to radiographic union 3.2 months (95% Confidence Interval (CI) 2.5–3.8 95% CI). CT scans demonstrated early periosteal callus, beneath the osteoperiosteal flap, bridging the opening wedge cortex. Clinical union occurred at 4.1 months (95% CI 3.9–4.2 months). Complications included superficial surgical site infection (1/23), deep vein thrombosis (1/23), and symptomatic metalwork requiring removal (7/23). Conclusions. The osteoperiosteal flap technique was a safe and effective technique for opening wedge osteotomies around the knee with a reliable rate of union


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 45 - 45
1 Apr 2022
Chaudhary M Sagade B Ankleshwaria T Lakhani P Chaudhary S Chaudhary J
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Introduction. We assessed the role of four different High Tibial osteotomies (HTOs) for medial compartment osteoarthritis of knee (MCOA): Medial Opening Wedge High Tibial Osteotomy (MOWHTO), Focal Dome Osteotomy with Ilizarov Fixator (FDO-I), intra-articular, Tibial Condylar Valgus Osteotomy with plating (TCVO-P) and intra-articular plus extra-articular osteotomy with Ilizarov(TCVO-I); in correcting three deformity categories: primary coronal plane varus measured by Mechanical Axis deviation (MAD), secondary intra-articular deformities measured by Condylar Plateau Angle (CPA) and Joint Line Convergence Angle (JLCA), and tertiary sagittal, rotational and axial plane deformities in choosing them. Materials and Methods. We retrospectively studied HTOs in 141 knees (126 patients). There were 58, 40, 26, and 17 knees respectively in MOWHTO, FDO-I, TCVO-P and TCVO-I. We measured preoperative (bo) And postoperative (po) deformity parameters. Results. Average age was 56.1, average follow-up was 44.6 months. Mean bo-MAD in MOWHTO, FDO-I, TCVO-P, and TCVO-I were 8.8, −14.7, −11.5, −30.8% respectively. po-MAD was close to Fujisawa point in all except TCVO-P (45.2%). CPA corrected from −4.9° to −1.4° (p=0.02)and JLCA from 5.6° to 3.2° (p=0.001); CPA was better corrected by Intra-articular osteotomies (p=0.01). Conclusions. MOWHTO corrects isolated mild primary varus deformities (bo-MAD≥ 0%). Primary varus (bo-MAD= −25% −0%) with associated tertiary sagittal, rotational, or axial deformities, without secondary intra-articular deformities needed FDO-I. Primary varus (bo-MAD= −25% −0%) with secondary intra-articular deformities, without tertiary deformities, corrected well with TCVO-P. TCVO-I corrects severe primary varus (bo-MAD< −25%) with large deformities in secondary and tertiary categories


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 10, Issue 6 | Pages 21 - 24
1 Dec 2021


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 10, Issue 4 | Pages 17 - 20
1 Aug 2021


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 58 - 58
1 Mar 2021
Kinghorn A Bowd J Whatling G Wilson C Mason D Holt C
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Abstract. OBJECTIVES. Valgus high tibial osteotomy (HTO) represents an effective treatment for patients with medial compartment osteoarthritis (OA) in a varus knee. However, the mechanisms which cause this clinical improvement are unclear. Previous studies suggest a wider stance gait can reduce medial compartment loading via reduction in the external knee adduction moment (KAM); a measure implicated in progression of medial compartment OA. This study aimed to measure whether valgus HTO is associated with a postoperative increase in static stance width. METHODS. 32 patients, recruited in the Biomechanics and Bioengineering Centre Versus Arthritis HTO study, underwent valgus (medial opening wedge) HTO. Weightbearing pre- and post- operative radiographs were taken showing both lower limbs. The horizontal distance, measured from a fixed point on the right talus to the corresponding point on the left, was divided by the talus width to give a standardised “stance width” for each radiograph. The difference between pre- and post- operative stance width was compared for each patient using a paired sample t-test. RESULTS. Preoperatively, mean stance was 4.00 talar-widths but postoperatively this increased to 5.41. This mean increase of 1.42 talar-widths was statistically significant (p=0.001) and represents a mean proportional increase in stance width of 35.5% following HTO. Of the 32 patients, 23 showed increased stance width and 9 decreased (range −4.64 to 6.00 talar-widths). CONCLUSIONS. These findings indicate an association of frontal plane surgical realignment at the proximal tibia via a medial opening wedge HTO with an increased stance width on postoperative radiographs. Considering both wider stance gait and HTO have been shown to affect the progression of medial compartment OA, these results may explain one mechanism contributing to the efficacy of HTO surgery. However, the range of changes in stance width suggests significant variability in how patients adapt at a whole-limb and whole-body level following HTO. Declaration of Interest. (b) declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research reported:I declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research project


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 9, Issue 6 | Pages 18 - 21
1 Dec 2020


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1689 - 1696
1 Dec 2020
Halai MM Pinsker E Mann MA Daniels TR

Aims

Preoperative talar valgus deformity ≥ 15° is considered a contraindication for total ankle arthroplasty (TAA). We compared operative procedures and clinical outcomes of TAA in patients with talar valgus deformity ≥ 15° and < 15°.

Methods

A matched cohort of patients similar for demographics and components used but differing in preoperative coronal-plane tibiotalar valgus deformity ≥ 15° (valgus, n = 50; 52% male, mean age 65.8 years (SD 10.3), mean body mass index (BMI) 29.4 (SD 5.2)) or < 15° (control, n = 50; 58% male, mean age 65.6 years (SD 9.8), mean BMI 28.7 (SD 4.2)), underwent TAA by one surgeon. Preoperative and postoperative radiographs, Ankle Osteoarthritis Scale (AOS) pain and disability and 36-item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) version 2 scores were collected prospectively. Ancillary procedures, secondary procedures, and complications were recorded.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1542 - 1548
2 Nov 2020
Stirling PHC Oliver WM Ling Tan H Brown IDM Oliver CW McQueen MM Molyneux SG Duckworth AD

Aims

The primary aim of this study was to describe patient satisfaction and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) following corrective osteotomy for a symptomatic malunion of the distal radius.

Methods

We retrospectively identified 122 adult patients from a single centre over an eight-year period who had undergone corrective osteotomy for a symptomatic malunion of the distal radius. The primary long-term outcome was the Patient-Rated Wrist Evaluation (PRWE) score. Secondary outcomes included the Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (QuickDASH) score, the EQ-5D-5L score, complications, and the Net Promoter Score (NPS). Multivariate regression analysis was used to determine factors associated with the PRWE score.