Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is a well proven surgical procedure. Squat and gait motions are common activities in daily life. However, squat motion is known as most dissatisfying motion in activities in daily life after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Dissatisfaction after TKA might refer to muscle co-contraction between quadriceps and hamstrings. The purposed of this study was to develop squat and gait simulation model and analyses the contact mechanics and quadriceps and hamstring muscle stability. We hypothesized that squat model shows larger contact forces and lower hamstring to quadriceps force ratio than gait model. Squat motion and gait model were simulated in musculoskeletal simulation software (AnyBody Modeling System, AnyBody Technology, Denmark). Subject-specific bone models used in the simulation were reconstructed from CT images by Mimics (Materialize, Belgium). The lower extremity model was constructed with pelvis, femur, tibia, foot segments and total knee replacement components: femoral component, tibial insert, tibial tray, and patella component [Fig.1]. The muscle model was consisted of 160 muscle elements. The TKR components used in this study are PS-type LOSPA Primary Knee System (Corentec Co., Ltd, Republic of Korea). Force-dependent kinematics method was used in the simulation. The model was simulated to squat from 15° to 100° knee flexion, in 100 frames. Gait simulation model was based on motion capture and force-plate system. Motion capture and force-plate data were from grand challenge competition dataset.Introduction
Materials and Methods
The mid- or long-term results of acetabular revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) in Korea are rare. The purpose of this study is to report the mid-term radiographic results (> 5 years) of acetabular revision THA with porous-coated cementless Trilogy® cup (Zimmer, Warsaw, IN, USA). Between 1999 and 2010, 77 patients (79 hips) had underwent acetabular revision THA with Trilogy® cup. Eight patients (8 hips) were excluded due to death before 5-year follow-up, and 22 patients (23 hips) were excluded due to less than 5-year follow-up or follow-up loss. Forty-seven patients (48 hips) were included in our study. The mean age was 57.9 years (range, 36 to 76 years) and the mean follow-up was 9.8 years (range 5.0 to 16.2 years). The causes of revision were aseptic loosening in 40 hips, and septic loosening in 8 hips, respectively. Both acetabular and femoral revisions were performed in 14 hips and isolated acetabular revision was done in 34 hips. Preoperetive acetabular bone defect according to Paprosky classification was; 1 in type I, 6 in IIA, 11 in IIB, 9 in IIC, 15 in IIIA, and 6 in IIIB.Introduction
Materials and Methods
To compare the clinical and radiological results between internal fixation using the proximal femoral nail system and bipolar hemiarthroplasty in reverse oblique intertrochanteric hip fracture in elderly patients. From January 2005 to July 2012, we reviewed 53 patients who had been treated surgically for reverse oblique intertrochanteric fracture and been followed up on for a minimum of 2 years. The patients, all over 70 years old, were divided into two groups for retrospective evaluation: one group was treated with open reduction and internal fixation using the proximal femoral nail system (31 cases), and the other group was treated with bipolar hemiarthroplasty (22 cases).Purpose
Materials and Methods
Mechanically assisted crevice corrosion (MACC) of head-neck modular taper junctions is prevalent in virtually all head neck tapers in use today. To date, no clear in vitro tests of design, material or surgical elements of the modular taper system have been reported that show which factors principally affect MACC in these tapers. Possible elements include seating load, head-neck offset, surface roughness, taper engagement length, material combination, angular mismatch, and taper diameter. The goals of this study were to use an incremental fretting corrosion test method1 to assess the above 7 elements using a design of experiments approach. The hypothesis is that only one or two principal factors affect fretting corrosion. A 27-2 design of experiment test (7 factors, ¼ factorial, n=32 total runs, 16 samples per condition per factor) was conducted. Factors included: Assembly Force (100, 4000N), Head Offset (1.5, 12 mm), Taper Locking Position (Mouth, Throat), Stem Taper Length (0.44, 0.54 in), Stem Taper Roughness (Ground, Ridged), Taper Diameter (9/10, 12/14), and Stem Material (CoCrMo, Ti-6Al-4V). The heads were CoCrMo coupled with taper coupons (DePuy Synthes, Warsaw, IN). Test components were assembled wet and seated axially with 100 or 4000N assembly force. The assemblies were immersed in PBS and potentiostatically held at −50mV vs. Ag/AgCl. Incremental cyclic loads were applied vertically to the head at 3Hz until a 4000N maximum load was reached (See Fig. 1). Fretting currents at 4000 N cyclic load were used for comparisons while other parameters, including onset load, subsidence, micromotion and pull off load were also captured. Statistical analysis was performed using Pareto charts and Student's T-tests for single factor comparisons (P < 0.05 was statistically significant).Introduction
Methods
We evaluated the clinical and radiographic outcomes of cementless bipolar hemiarthroplasty using rectangular cross-section stem for femoral neck fracture in elderly patients more than 80 years of age with osteoporosis. 76(cemented 46, cementless 30) bipolar hemiarthroplasties for femur neck fracture were performed in elderly patients more than 80 years old. The mean follow-up period was 4.3 years (2 to 7 years). The Harris hip score at last follow-up and pre-postoperative daily living activity scale according to Kitamura methods were analyzed clinically. The radiological results were assessed using stability of femoral stem and other complications were evaluated. Results: At last follow-up, there were no significant differences of Harris hip score and daily living activity between two groups. Stem loosening and instability were not observed in cementless arthroplasty. There were 18 cases of osseous fixation in radiologic study. There were 1 case of dislocation and 1 case of superficial infection in cemented arthroplasty and 1 case of deep infection in cementless arthroplasty.Purpose
Material and Methods
Rotational alignment is important for the long-term success and good functional outcome of total knee arthroplasty (TKA). While the surgical transepicondylar axis (sTEA) is the generally accepted landmark on the distal femur, a precise and easily identifiable anatomical landmark on the tibia has yet to be established. Our aim was to compare five axes on the proximal tibia in normal and osteoarthritic (OA) knees to determine the best landmark for determining rotational alignment during TKA. One hundred twenty patients with OA knees and 30 without knee OA were recruited for the study. Computed tomography (CT) images were obtained and converted through multiplanar reconstruction so the angles between the sTEA and the axes of the proximal tibia could be measured. Five AP axes were chosen: the line connecting the center of the posterior cruciate ligament(PCL) and the medial border of the patellar tendon at the cutting level of the tibia (PCL-PT), the line from the PCL to the medial border of the tibial tuberosity (PCL-TT1), the line from the PCL to the border of the medial third of the tibia (PCL-TT2), the line from the PCL to the apex of the tibia (PCL-TT3), and the AP axis of the tibial prosthesis along with the anterior cortex of the proximal tibia (anterior tibial curved cortex, ATCC).Background
Methods
Although vertebroplasty is very effective for relieving acute pain from an osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture, not all patients who undergo vertebroplasty receive the same degree of benefit from the procedure. In order to identify the ideal candidate for vertebroplasty, pre-operative prognostic demographic or clinico-radiological factors need to be identified. The objective of this study was to identify the pre-operative prognostic factors related to the effect of vertebroplasty on acute pain control using a cohort of surgically and non-surgically managed patients. Patients with single-level acute osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture at thoracolumbar junction (T10 to L2) were followed. If the patients were not satisfied with acute pain reduction after a three-week conservative treatment, vertebroplasty was recommended. Pain assessment was carried out at the time of diagnosis, as well as three, four, six, and 12 weeks after the diagnosis. The effect of vertebroplasty, compared with conservative treatment, on back pain (visual analogue score, VAS) was analysed with the use of analysis-of-covariance models that adjusted for pre-operative VAS scores.Objectives
Patients and Methods
To observe the follow-up results of standard cemented bipolar hemiarthroplasty with double loop and tension band wiring technique for treatment of unstable intertrochanteric hip fractures in elderly patients with osteoporosis. From May 2000 to May 2006, 86 cemented bipolar hemiarthroplasties were performed in elderly patients who had unstable intertrochanteric fractures. The mean age at the time of surgery was 82 years old. The average follow-up period were 5.3 years. We evaluated post-operative results after operation by clinical and radiographic methods.Purpose
Materials and Methods
To perform comparative analysis between the results of internal fixation using proximal femoral nail system and bipolar hemiarthroplasty in pantrochanteric hip fracture in elderly patients. From January 2006 to February 2012, we reviewed 43 patients, who were treated surgically for pantrochanterichip fractures, with a minimum of 2 years follow up. The patient's age was older than 70 year old. The patients were divided into three groups and evaluated, retrospectively. The fracture reduction were regarded as satisfactory in S-OR-IF group(17 cases) and unsatisfactory in US-OR-IF group(9 cases) and the other group was treated with bipolar hemiarthroplasty (BHA group, 17 cases.)Purpose
Materials and Methods
Theoretically, improved material properties of new alumina matrix composite (AMC) material, Delta ceramics, are expected to decrease concerns associated with pure alumina ceramics and allow manufacturing thinner liners and consequent larger heads. However, limited short-term clinical results are available and mid-term results of these effects are unclear. (1) Does AMC material decrease the rate of ceramic fracture and noise, concerns of previous-generation ceramics, following change of material properties? (2) Does the possible use of larger heads consequent to manufacturing thinner liners decrease dislocation rate and affect inguinal pain? (3) Do any other complications associated with the use of AMC ceramics occur?Background
Questions/Purposes
In this study, we investigated the long-term clinical results and survivorship of minimally invasive unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) by collecting cases that have been implanted for >10 years ago. Medial UKA on 180 cases in 142 patients was performed over a period of 1 year after the first introduction of minimally invasive UKA from January 2002 to December 2002. Among these, 166 cases in 128 patients who underwent Oxford phase 3 medial UKA using the minimally invasive surgery, with the exclusion of 14 cases including 10 cases of follow-up loss and 4 cases of death, were selected as the subject. The mean age of the patients at the time of surgery was 61 years, and the duration of the follow-up was minimum 10 years. All the preoperative diagnosis was osteoarthritis of the knee joint. Clinical and radiographic assessments were measured by the Knee Society clinical rating system, and the survival analysis was confirmed by the Kaplan–Meier method with 95% confidence interval (CI).Background
Methods
To identify the modes of failure after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) in patients ≤ 55 years of age and to compare with those ≥ 56 years of age in patients who underwent revision TKA. We retrospectively reviewed 256 revision TKAs among patients who underwent TKA for knee osteoarthritis between January 1992 and December 2012. The causes of TKA failure were analyzed and compared between those ≤ 55 years of age and those ≥ 56 years of age. The age at the time of primary surgery was ≤ 55 years in 30 patients (31 knees) and ≥ 56 years in 210 patients (225 knees).Purpose
Materials and Methods
A stem extension improves fixation stability of a tibial component. We need caution not to contact the tibial cortex with an offset adaptor. A symmetric tibial stem design often requires the component's re-positioning with negative effects. Therefore, the objective of this study was to validate clinical efficacy of a tibial baseplate with asymmetric stemmed position (TB-ASP) using aligning outlier rate. We hypothesized that TB-ASP design will be better aligned without unessential offset adaptor than a tibial baseplate with symmetric stemmed position (TB-SSP). TB-ASP was designed based on the anthropometric standard model (58 female cadavers, 54.7±11.4 years)(Figure 1.). To validate the stem position, 3D bone models of 20 OA patients (71.8±7.2 years) was reconstructed. All virtual surgery has done by one surgeon with consistent surgical procedure for the analysis criteria. An analysis of TB-ASP's aligning outlier was proceeded by following steps; 1) aligning tibial baseplate to the line from medial 1/3 tuberosity to the center of PCL, 2) selecting tibial baseplate's size for maximal bone coverage without problematic overhang, 3) trying to displace tibial baseplate and stem extension(120mm long) not to contact tibial cortex. A case invading tibial cortex was considered to be an outlier. The ratio using offset adaptor was compared to those of TB-SSP. Statistical analysis was performed using paired t-test.Introduction
Methods
3-D Printing with direct metal tooling (DMT) technology was innovatively introduced in the field of surface treatment of prosthesis to improve, moreover to overcome the problems of plasma spray, hopefully resulting in opening the possibility of another page of coating technology. We presumed such modification on the surface of Co-Cr alloy by DMT would improve the ability of Co-Cr alloys to osseointegrate. We compared the in vitro and in vivo ability of cells to adhere to DMT coated Co-Cr alloy to that of two different types of surface modifications: machined and plasma spray(TPS). We performed energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy and scanned electron microscopy investigations to assess the structure and morphology of the surfaces. Biologic and morphologic responses to osteoblast cell lines of human were then examined by measuring cell proliferation, cell differentiation (alkaline phosphatase activity), and avb3 integrin. The cell proliferation rate, alkaline phosphatase activity, and cell adhesion in the MAO group increased in comparison to those in the machined and grit-blasted groups.Introduction
Method
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the clinical outcomes and and radiological findings of primary total hip arthroplasty(THA) performed by using cemented polished femoral stem. We retrospectively reviewed 91 hips (84 patients) that had undergone primary THA with cemented polished femoral stem after follow-up more than 10 years. The mean age at surgery was 57 years old (47 to 75). Mean follow up period was 12. 8 years(10.1 to 14). Clinical evaluation was performed using Harris hip score. The radiographic evaluation was performed in terms of the cementing technique, including of subsidence within the cement mantle, radiolucent lines at the cement-bone or cement-stem interface, cortical hypertrophy, and calcar resorption.Purpose
Materials and Methods
To evaluate the effectiveness of post-operative pain management using the intra-operative peri-articular injection(PAI) and/or electromyography (EMG)-guided preoperative femoral nerve block (FNB) in total knee arthroplasty(TKA). From March 2013 to February 2014, 90 knees which underwent primary TKA by one surgeon were included in our study. The patients were classified into three groups; a single injection FNB with an EMG guide (Group I, 30 knees), intra-operative PAI (Group II, 30 knees) and both FNB and PAI (Group III, 30 knees). Pain at rest and moving was evaluated by Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) at postoperative 0, 4, 8, 24 and 48 hours. Postoperative range of motion, time to walking, total blood loss, amount of opioid consumption and complications were compared in each group.Purpose
Materials and Methods
To measure the vitamin D level of the patients who received total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and evaluate the effect of vitamin D level on the results of TKA. From February 2012 to January 2013, 151 female patients (204 knees) who underwent primary TKA by one surgeon were included in our study. Preoperative vitamin D level was measured and analyzed the relationship between that and preoperative Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), and Knee Society Knee Score (KS) and Function Score (FS). Thirty-nine patients (39 knees) who received unilateral TKA and could be followed up more than 1 year after operation were evaluated for the relationship between vitamin D level and postoperative VAS, KS and FS, and Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC) score.Purpose
Materials and Methods
The NexGen® legacy posterior stabilized (LPS)-Flex total knee system (Zimmer, Warsaw, IN) is designed to provide 150° of flexion following total knee arthroplasty (TKA). But, recent reports found a high incidence of loosening of the femoral component related to the deep flexion provided. We evaluated 9- to 12-year clinical and radiological follow-up results after NexGen® LPS-Flex TKA. A retrospective evaluation was undertaken of 209 knees in 160 patients (21 males, 139 females) who were followed up for more than 9 years after Nexgen®LPS-Flex TKA. Evaluations included preoperative and postoperative range of motion(ROM), Knee Society(KS) knee score, function scores, tibiofemoral angle and assessment of postoperative complications.Purpose
Materials and Methods
The purpose of this study was to compare the clinical and radiological results after total knee arthroplasty(TKA) with PCL sacrificing (PCS) Medial Pivot Knee (MPK) and PCL Substituting (PS) Nexgen® LPS. One hundred twenty knees in 80 patients after TKA with PCS ADVANCE® MPK (Group I) and 116 knees in 85 patients with PS Nexgen® LPS (Group II) were retrospectively evaluated. All the patients were followed up for more than 6 years. The evaluations included preoperative and postoperative range of motion (ROM), tibiofemoral angle, Knee Society (KS) knee and function score, Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) knee score, WOMAC score and postoperative complications.Purpose
Materials and Methods
We compared the ceiling effects of two patient-rating
scores, the Disability of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) and
Patient-Rated Wrist Evaluation (PRWE), and a physician-rating score,
the Modified Mayo Wrist Score (MMWS) in assessing the outcome of
surgical treatment of an unstable distal radial fracture. A total
of 77 women with a mean age of 64.2 years (50 to 88) who underwent
fixation using a volar locking plate for an unstable distal radial fracture
between 2011 and 2013 were enrolled in this study. All completed
the DASH and PRWE questionnaires one year post-operatively and were
assessed using the MMWS by the senior author. The ceiling effects
in the outcome data assessed for each score were estimated. The data assessed with both patient-rating scores, the DASH and
PRWE, showed substantial ceiling effects, whereas the data assessed
with MMWS showed no ceiling effect. Researchers should be aware of a possible ceiling effect in the
assessment of the outcome of the surgical treatment of distal radial
fractures using patient-rating scores. It could also increase the
likelihood of a type II error. Cite this article: