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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 18 - 18
1 Mar 2021
Ng G Bankes M Grammatopoulos G Jeffers J Cobb J
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Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Cam femoroacetabular impingement (FAI – femoral head-neck deformity) and developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH – insufficient acetabular coverage) constitute a large portion of adverse hip loading and early degeneration. Spinopelvic anatomy may play a role in hip stability thus we examined which anatomical relationships can best predict range of motion (ROM).

METHODS

Twenty-four cadaveric hips with cam FAI or DDH (12:12) were CT imaged and measured for multiple femoral (alpha angles, head-neck offset, neck angles, version), acetabular (centre-edge angle, inclination, version), and spinopelvic features (pelvic incidence). The hips were denuded to the capsule and mounted onto a robotic tester. The robot positioned each hip in multiple flexion angles (Extension, Neutral 0°, Flexion 30°, Flexion 60°, Flexion 90°); and performed internal-external rotations to 5 Nm in each position. Independent t-tests compared the anatomical parameters and ROM between FAI and DDH (CI = 95%). Multiple linear regressions determined which anatomical parameters could predict ROM.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 27 - 27
1 Mar 2021
Dandridge O Garner A van Arkel R Amis A Cobb J
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Abstract

Objectives

Unicompartmental (UKA) and bicompartmental (BCA) knee arthroplasty are associated with improved functional outcomes compared to Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) in suitable patients, although the reason is poorly understood. The aim of this study was to measure how the different arthroplasties affect knee extensor function.

Methods

Extensor function was measured for sixteen cadaveric knees and then re-tested following the different arthroplasties. Eight knees underwent medial UKA then BCA, then posterior-cruciate retaining TKA, and eight underwent the lateral equivalents then TKA. Extensor efficiency was calculated for ranges of knee flexion associated with common activities of daily living. Data were analyzed with repeated measures analysis of variance (α=0.05).


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 2 | Pages 134 - 140
24 Feb 2021
Logishetty K Edwards TC Subbiah Ponniah H Ahmed M Liddle AD Cobb J Clark C

Aims

Restarting planned surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic is a clinical and societal priority, but it is unknown whether it can be done safely and include high-risk or complex cases. We developed a Surgical Prioritization and Allocation Guide (SPAG). Here, we validate its effectiveness and safety in COVID-free sites.

Methods

A multidisciplinary surgical prioritization committee developed the SPAG, incorporating procedural urgency, shared decision-making, patient safety, and biopsychosocial factors; and applied it to 1,142 adult patients awaiting orthopaedic surgery. Patients were stratified into four priority groups and underwent surgery at three COVID-free sites, including one with access to a high dependency unit (HDU) or intensive care unit (ICU) and specialist resources. Safety was assessed by the number of patients requiring inpatient postoperative HDU/ICU admission, contracting COVID-19 within 14 days postoperatively, and mortality within 30 days postoperatively.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 21 - 21
1 Feb 2021
Logishetty K Edwards T Liddle A Dean E Cobb J Clark C
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Background

In the United Kingdom, over 1 million elective surgeries were cancelled due to COVID-19, resulting in over 1.9 million people now waiting more than 4 months for their procedure – 3x the number last year. To address this backlog, the healthcare service has been asked to develop locally-designed ‘COVID-light’ facilities. In our local system, 822 patients awaited orthopaedic surgery when elective surgery was permitted to resume. The phased return of service required a careful and pragmatic prioritisation of patients, to protect resources, patients, and healthcare workers.

Aims

We aim to describe how the COVID-19 Algorithm for Resuming Elective Surgery (CARES) was used to consider 1) Which type of operation and patient should be prioritised? and 2) Which patients are safe to undergo surgery? The central tenets to this were patient safety, predicted efficacy of the surgery, and delivering compassionate care by considering biopsychosocial factors.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 54 - 54
1 Feb 2021
Dandridge O Garner A Amis A Cobb J van Arkel R
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As treatments of knee osteoarthrosis are continually refined, increasingly sophisticated methods of evaluating their biomechanical function are required. Whilst TKA shows good preoperative pain relief and survivorship, functional outcomes are sub-optimal, and research focus has shifted towards their improvement. Restoration of physiological function is a common design goal that relies on clear, detailed descriptions of native biomechanics. Historical simplifications of true biomechanisms, for example sagittal plane approximation of knee kinematics, are becoming progressively less suitable for evaluation of new technologies. The patellar tendon moment arm (PTMA) is an example of such a metric of knee function that usefully informs design of knee arthroplasty but is not fully understood, in part due to limitations in its measurement. This research optimized PTMA measurement and identified the influence of knee size and sex on its variation.

The PTMA about the instantaneous helical axis was calculated from optical tracked positional data. A fabricated knee model facilitated calculation optimization, comparing four data smoothing techniques (raw, Butterworth filtering, generalized cross-validated cubic spline-interpolation and combined filtering/interpolation). The PTMA was then measured for 24 fresh-frozen cadaveric knees, under physiologically based loading and extension rates. Sex differences in PTMA were assessed before and after size scaling.

Large errors were measured for raw and interpolated-only techniques in the mid-range of extension, whilst both raw and filtered-only methods saw large inaccuracies at terminal extension and flexion. Combined filtering/interpolation enabled sub-mm PTMA calculation accuracy throughout the range of knee flexion, including at terminal extension/flexion (root-mean-squared error 0.2mm, max error 0.5mm) (Figure 1).

Before scaling, mean PTMA throughout flexion was 46mm; mean, peak, and minimum PTMA values were larger in males, as was the PTMA at terminal flexion, the change in PTMA from terminal flexion to peak, and the change from peak to terminal extension (mean differences ranging from 5 to 10mm, p<0.05). Knee size was highly correlated with PTMA magnitude (r>0.8, p<0.001) (Figure 2). Scaling eliminated sex differences in PTMA magnitude, but peak PTMA occurred closer to terminal extension in females (female 15°, male 29°, p=0.01) (Figure 3).

Improved measurement of the PTMA reveals previously undocumented characteristics that may help to improve the functional outcomes of knee arthroplasty. Knee size accounted for two-thirds of the variation in PTMA magnitude, but not the flexion angle at which peak PTMA occurred, which has implications for morphotype-specific arthroplasty and musculoskeletal models. The developed calculation framework is applicable both in vivo and vitro for accurate PTMA measurement and might be used to evaluate the relative performance of emerging technologies.

For any figures or tables, please contact the authors directly.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 44 - 44
1 Feb 2021
Edwards T Patel A Szyszka B Coombs A Kucheria R Cobb J Logishetty K
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Background

Revision total knee arthroplasty (rTKA) is a high stakes procedure with complex equipment and multiple steps. For rTKA using the ATTUNE system revising femoral and tibial components with sleeves and stems, there are over 240 pieces of equipment that require correct assembly at the appropriate time. Due to changing teams, work rotas, and the infrequency of rTKR, scrub nurses may encounter these operations infrequently and often rely heavily on company representatives to guide them. In turn, this delays and interrupts surgical efficiency and can result in error. This study investigates the impact of a fully immersive virtual reality (VR) curriculum on training scrub nurses in technical skills and knowledge of performing a complex rTKA, to improve efficiency and reduce error.

Method

Ten orthopaedic scrub nurses were recruited and trained in four VR sessions over a 4-week period. Each VR session involved a guided mode, where participants were taught the steps of rTKA surgery by the simulator in a simulated operating theatre. The latter 3 sessions involved a guided mode followed by an unguided VR assessment. Outcome measures in the unguided assessment were related to procedural sequence, duration of surgery and efficiency of movement. Transfer of skills was assessed during a pre-training and post-training assessment, where participants completed multi-step instrument selection and assembly using the real equipment. A pre and post-training questionnaire assessed the participants knowledge, confidence and anxiety.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 53 - 53
1 Feb 2021
Garner A Dandridge O Amis A Cobb J van Arkel R
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Combined Partial Knee Arthroplasty (CPKA) is a promising alternative to Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) for the treatment of multi-compartment arthrosis. Through the simultaneous or staged implantation of multiple Partial Knee Arthroplasties (PKAs), CPKA aims to restore near-normal function of the knee, through retention of the anterior cruciate ligament and native disease-free compartment. Whilst PKA is well established, CPKA is comparatively novel and associated biomechanics are less well understood.

Clinically, PKA and CPKA have been shown to better restore knee function compared to TKA, particularly during fast walking. The biomechanical explanation for this superiority remains unclear but may be due to better preservation of the extensor mechanism. This study sought to assess and compare extensor function after PKA, CPKA, and TKA.

An instrumented knee extension rig facilitated the measurement extension moment of twenty-four cadaveric knees, which were measured in the native state and then following a sequence of arthroplasty procedures. Eight knees underwent medial Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty (UKA-M), followed by patellofemoral arthroplasty (PFA) thereby converting to medial Bicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty (BCA-M). In the final round of testing the PKA implants were removed a posterior-cruciate retaining TKA was implanted. The second eight received lateral equivalents (UKA-L then BCA-L) then TKA. The final eight underwent simultaneous Bi-Unicondylar Arthroplasty (Bi-UKA) before TKA. Extensor efficiencies over extension ranges typical of daily tasks were also calculated and differences between arthroplasties were assessed using repeated measures analysis of variance.

For both the medial and lateral groups, UKA demonstrated the same extensor function as the native knee. BCA resulted in a small reduction in extensor moment between 70–90° flexion but, in the context of daily activity, extensor efficiency was largely unaffected and no significant reductions were found. TKA, however, resulted in significantly reduced extensor moments, leading to efficiency deficits ranging from 8% to 43% in flexion ranges associated with downhill walking and the stance phase of gait, respectively.

Comparing the arthroplasties: TKA was significantly less efficient than both UKA-M and BCA-M over ranges representing stair ascent and gait; TKA showed a significant 23% reduction compared to BCA-L in the same range. There were no differences in efficiency between the UKAs and BCAs over any flexion range and TKA efficiency was consistently lower than all other arthroplasties.

Bi-UKA generated the same extensor moment as native knee at flexion angles typical of fast gait (0–30°). Again, TKA displayed significantly reduced extensor moments towards full extension but returned to the normal range in deep flexion. Overall, TKA was significantly less efficient following TKA than Bi-UKA.

Recipients of PKA and CPKA have superior functional outcomes compared to TKA, particularly in relation to fast walking. This in vitro study found that both UKA and CPKA better preserve extensor function compared to TKA, especially when evaluated in the context of daily functional tasks. TKA reduced knee extensor efficiency by over 40% at flexion angles associated with gait, arguably the most important activity to maintain patient satisfaction. These findings go some way to explaining functional deficiencies of TKA compared to CPKA observed clinically.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 8 | Pages 922 - 928
1 Aug 2019
Garner A van Arkel RJ Cobb J

Aims

There has been a recent resurgence in interest in combined partial knee arthroplasty (PKA) as an alternative to total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The varied terminology used to describe these procedures leads to confusion and ambiguity in communication between surgeons, allied health professionals, and patients. A standardized classification system is required for patient safety, accurate clinical record-keeping, clear communication, correct coding for appropriate remuneration, and joint registry data collection.

Materials and Methods

An advanced PubMed search was conducted, using medical subject headings (MeSH) to identify terms and abbreviations used to describe knee arthroplasty procedures. The search related to TKA, unicompartmental (UKA), patellofemoral (PFA), and combined PKA procedures. Surveys were conducted of orthopaedic surgeons, trainees, and biomechanical engineers, who were asked which of the descriptive terms and abbreviations identified from the literature search they found most intuitive and appropriate to describe each procedure. The results were used to determine a popular consensus.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 18 - 18
1 May 2019
Logishetty K Rudran B Gofton W Beaule P Field R Cobb J
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Background

For total hip arthroplasty (THA), cognitive training prior to performing real surgery may be an effective adjunct alongside simulation to shorten the learning curve. This study sought to create a cognitive training tool to perform direct anterior approach THA, validated by expert surgeons; and test its use as a training tool compared to conventional material.

Methods

We employed a modified Delphi method with four expert surgeons from three international centres of excellence. Surgeons were independently observed performing THA before undergoing semi-structured cognitive task analysis (CTA) before completing successive rounds of electronic surveys until consensus. The agreed CTA was incorporated into a mobile and web-based platform. Forty surgical trainees (CT1-ST4) were randomised to CTA-training or a digital op-tech with surgical videos, before performing a simulated DAA THA in a validated fully-immersive virtual reality simulator.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 27 - 27
1 May 2019
Logishetty K Rudran B Gofton W Beaule P Cobb J
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Background

Virtual Reality (VR) uses headsets and motion-tracked controllers so surgeons can perform simulated total hip arthroplasty (THA) in a fully-immersive, interactive 3D operating theatre. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of laboratory-based VR training on the ability of surgical trainees to perform direct anterior approach THA on cadavers.

Methods

Eighteen surgical trainees (CT1-ST4) with no prior experience of direct anterior approach (DAA) THA completed an intensive 1-day course (lectures, dry-bone workshops and technique demonstrations). They were randomised to either a 5-week protocol of VR simulator training or conventional preparation (operation manuals and observation of real surgery). Trainees performed DAA-THA on cadaveric hips, assisted by a passive scrub nurse and surgical assistant. Performance was measured on the Intercollegiate Surgical Curriculum Project (ISCP) procedure-based assessment (PBA), on a 9-point global summary score (Table 1). This was independently assessed by 2 hip surgeons blinded to group allocation. The secondary outcome measure was error in cup orientation from a predefined target (40° inclination and 20° anteversion).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 124 - 124
1 Apr 2019
Karia M Ali A Harris S Abel R Cobb J
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Background

Defining optimal coronal alignment in Total Knee Replacement (TKR) is a controversial and poorly understood subject. Tibial bone density may affect implant stability and functional outcomes following TKR. Our aim was to compare the bone density profile at the implant-tibia interface following TKR in mechanical versus kinematic alignment.

Methods

Pre-operative CT scans for 10 patients undergoing medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty were obtained. Using surgical planning software, tibial cuts were made for TKR with 7 degrees posterior slope and either neutral (mechanical) or 3 degrees varus (kinematic) alignment. Signal intensity, in Hounsfield Units (HU), was measured at 25,600 points throughout an axial slice at the implant-tibia interface and density profiles compared along defined radial axes from the centre of the tibia towards the cortices (Hotelling's t-squared and paired t-test).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 108 - 108
1 Apr 2019
Riviere C Maillot C Auvinet E Cobb J
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Introduction

The objective of our study was to determine the extent to which the quality of the biomechanical reconstruction when performing hip replacement influences gait performances. We aimed to answer the following questions: 1) Does the quality of restoration of hip biomechanics after conventional THR influence gait outcomes? (question 1), and 2) Is HR more beneficial to gait outcomes when compared with THR? (question 2).

Methods

we retrospectively reviewed 52 satisfied unilateral prosthetic hip patients (40 THRs and 12 HRs) who undertook objective gait assessment at a mean follow-up of 14 months. The quality of the prosthetic hip biomechanical restoration was assessed on standing pelvic radiograph by comparison to the healthy contralateral hip.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 123 - 123
1 Apr 2019
Karia M Vishnu-Mohan S Boughton O Auvinet E Wozencroft R Clarke S Halewood C Cobb J
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Aims

Accurate and precise acetabular reaming is a requirement for the press-fit stability of cementless acetabular hip replacement components. The accuracy of reaming depends on the reamer, the reaming technique and the bone quality. Conventional reamers wear with use resulting in inaccurate reaming diameters, whilst the theoretical beneficial effect of ‘whirlwind’ reaming over straight reaming has not previously been documented. Our aim was to compare the accuracy and precision of single use additively-manufactured reamers with new conventional reamers and to compare the effect of different acetabular reaming techniques.

Materials and Methods

Forty composite bone models, half high-density and half low-density, were reamed with a new 61 mm conventional acetabular reamer using either straight or ‘whirlwind’ reaming techniques. This was repeated with a 61 mm single use additively-manufactured reamer. Reamed cavities were scanned using a 3D laser scanner with mean diameters of reamed cavities compared using the Mann-Whitney U test to determine any statistically significant differences between groups (p<0.05) [Fig. 1).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 75 - 75
1 Apr 2019
Boughton O Uemura K Tamura K Takao M Hamada H Cobb J Sugano N
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Objectives

For patients with Developmental Dysplasia of the Hip (DDH) who progress to needing total joint arthroplasty it is important to understand the morphology of the femur when planning for and undertaking the surgery, as the surgery is often technically more challenging in patients with DDH on both the femoral and acetabular parts of the procedure1. The largest number of male DDH patients with degenerative joint disease previously assessed in a morphological study was 122. In this computed tomography (CT) based morphological study we aimed to assess whether there were any differences in femoral morphology between male and female patients with developmental dysplasia undergoing total hip arthroplasty (THA) in a cohort of 49 male patients, matched to 49 female patients.

Methods

This was a retrospective study of the pre-operative CT scans of all male patients with DDH who underwent THA at two hospitals in Japan between 2006–2017. Propensity score matching was used to match these patients with female patients in our database who had undergone THA during the same period, resulting in 49 male and 49 female patients being matched on age and Crowe classification. The femoral length, anteversion, neck-shaft angle, offset, canal-calcar ratio, canal flare index, lateral centre-edge angle, alpha angle and pelvic incidence were measured for each patient on their pre-operative CT scans.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 26 - 26
1 Jan 2019
Choudhury A Auvient E Iranpour F Lambkin R Wiik A Hing C Cobb J
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Patellofemoral osteoarthritis (PFOA) affects 32% men and 36% women over the age of 60years and is associated with anterior knee pain, stiffness, and poor mobility. Patellofemoral arthroplasty (PFA) is a bone-sparing treatment for isolated PFOA. This study set out to investigate the relationship between patient-related outcome measures (PROMs) and measurements obtained from gait analysis before and after PFA. There are currently no studies relating to gait analysis and PFA available in the literature

A prospective cohort study was conducted of ten patients known to have isolated PFOA who had undergone PFA compared to a gender and age matched control group. The patients were also asked to complete questionnaires (Oxford knee score (OKS), EQ-5D-5L) before surgery and one year after surgery. Gait analysis was done on an instrumented treadmill comparing Ground reaction force parameters between the control and pre and post-operative PFA patients

The average age 60 (49–69) years with a female to male ratio of 9:1. Patient and healthy subjects were matched for age and gender, with no significant difference in BMI. Post-op PFA improvement in gait seen in ground reaction force at 6.5km/h. Base support difference was statistically significant both on the flat P=0.0001 and uphill P=0.429 (5% inclination) and P=0.0062 (10% inclination). PROMS response rate was 70%(7/10) pre-operative and 60%(6/10) post-operative. EQ-5D-5L scores reflected patient health state was better post-operatively.

This study found that gait analysis provides an objective measure of functional gait and reflected by significant quality-of-life improvement of patients post PFA. Literature lacks studies relating to gait-analysis and PFA. Valuable information provided by this study highlights that PFA has a beneficial outcome reflected by PROMs and improvement in vertical ground reaction force and gait

Further research is needed to assess how care-providers may use gait-analysis as part of patient care plans for PFOA patients.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 1 - 1
1 Jan 2019
Logishetty K Van Arkel R Muirhead-Allwood S Ng G Cobb J Jeffers J
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The hip's capsular ligaments (CL) passively restrain extreme range of motion (ROM) by wrapping around the native femoral head/neck, and protect against impingement and instability. We compared how CL function was affected by device (hip resurfacing arthroplasty, HRA; dual mobility total hip arthroplasty, DM-THA; and conventional THA, C-THA), and surgical approach (anterior and posterior), with and without CL surgical-repair. We hypothesized that CL function would only be preserved when native head-size (HRA/DM-THA) was restored.

CL function was quantified on sixteen cadaveric hips, by measuring ROM by internally (IR) and externally rotating (ER) the hip in six functional positions, ranging from full extension with abduction to full flexion with adduction (squatting). Native ROM was compared to ROM after posterior capsulotomy (right hips) or anterior capsulotomy (left hips), and HRA, and C-THA and DM-THA, before and after CL repair.

Independent of approach, ROM increased most following C-THA (max 62°), then DM-THA (max 40°), then HRA (max 19°), indicating later CL engagement and reduced biomechanical function with smaller head-size. Dislocations also occurred in squatting after C-THA and DM-THA. CL-repair following HRA restored ROM to the native hip (max 8°). CL-repair following DM-THA reduced ROM hypermobility in flexed positions only and prevented dislocation (max 36°). CL-repair following C-THA did not reduce ROM or prevent dislocation.

For HRA and repair, native anatomy was preserved and ligament function was restored. For DM-THA with repair, ligament function depended on the movement of the mobile-bearing, with increased ROM in positions when ligaments could not wrap around head/neck. For C-THA, the reduced head-size resulted in inferior capsular mechanics in all positions as the ligaments remained slack, irrespective of repair.

Choosing devices with anatomic head-sizes (HRA/DM-THA) with capsular repair may have greater effect than surgical approach to protect against instability in the early postoperative period.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 2 - 2
1 Jan 2019
Boughton O Yan L Ma S Hansen U Giuliani F Cobb J Marrow J Abel R
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With information about a patient's bone mechanical properties orthopaedic operations could be optimised to reduce intra- and post-operative complications. However, there is currently no reliable method of measuring a patient's bone mechanical properties in vivo. We have previously investigated microindentation, using a 1.5mm diameter spherical indenter tip, and found no correlation between these measurements and compression testing measurements. We hypothesised that by using a larger diameter indenter tip we would closer match bone millimetre-scale mechanical properties.

20 bone samples were taken from 20 patients undergoing hip replacement surgery. The samples were machined from the femoral neck calcar cortical bone into 6×3×3mm parallelepiped specimens, aligned with the osteons along the long axis. The samples were micro-computed tomography (CT) scanned to calculate porosity. Microindentation was performed using a 6mm diameter, sapphire, spherical indenter tip. 12 indentations were performed in a grid and the reduced moduli were calculated using the Oliver-Pharr method. Compression testing was then performed to failure and the apparent elastic modulus was calculated for each sample.

A moderate correlation was found between the indentation reduced moduli and compression testing elastic moduli (r=0.52, r2=0.275, p=0.018). In addition, a moderate correlation was found between the indentation reduced moduli and CT-measured porosity (r=0.5, r2=0.251, p=0.025) and a strong correlation was found between compression testing moduli and porosity (r=0.75, r2=0.568, p<0.001).

Using large-tip spherical microindentation, indentation reduced moduli correlated significantly with compression testing apparent elastic moduli in these 20 cortical bone specimens. Microindentation using a large, spherical indenter tip may predict the mechanical properties of bone at the millimetre length scale and shows promise as a potential future clinical decision aid in surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 53 - 53
1 Nov 2018
Karia M Ali A Harris S Abel R Cobb J
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Tibial bone density may affect implant stability and functional outcomes following total knee replacement (TKR). Our aim was to characterise the bone density profile at the implant-tibia interface following TKR in mechanical versus kinematic alignment. Pre-operative computed tomography scans for 10 patients were obtained. Using surgical planning software, tibial cuts were made for TKR either neutral (mechanical) or 3 degrees varus (kinematic) alignment. Signal intensity, in Hounsfield Units (HU), was measured at 25,600 points throughout an axial slice at the implant-tibia interface and density profiles compared along defined radial axes from the centre of the tibia towards the cortices. From the tibial centre towards the lateral cortex, trabecular bone density for kinematic and mechanical TKR are similar in the inner 50% but differ significantly beyond this (p= 0.012). There were two distinct density peaks, with peak trabecular bone density being higher in kinematic TKR (p<0.001) and peak cortical bone density being higher in mechanical TKR (p<0.01). The difference in peak cortical to peak trabecular signal was 43 HU and 185 HU respectively (p<0.001). On the medial side there was no significant difference in density profile and a linear increase from centre to cortex. In the lateral proximal tibia, peak cortical and peak trabecular bone densities differ between kinematic TKR and mechanical TKR. Laterally, mechanical TKR may be more dependent upon cortical bone for support compared to kinematic TKR, where trabecular bone density is higher. This may have implications for surgical planning and implant design.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 4 - 4
1 Aug 2018
Cobb J Clarke S Halewood C Wozencroft R Jeffers J Logishetty K Keane B Johal H
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We aimed to demonstrate the clinical safety of a novel anatomic cementless ceramic hip resurfacing device. Concerns around the safety of metal on metal arthroplasty have made resurfacing less attractive, while long term function continues to make the concept appealing. Biolox Delta ceramic is now used in more than 50% of all hip arthroplasties, suggesting that it's safety profile is acceptable. We wondered if a combination of these concepts might work?

The preclinical testing of anatomic hip resurfacing device developed by our group was presented last year. A twenty patient safety study was designed. Patients had to be between the ages of 18 and 70. The initial size range was restricted to femoral heads between 46 and 54, representing the common sizes of hip resurfacing. The primary outcomes were clinical safety, PROMs and radiological control. Secondary outcomes include CTRSA and metal ion levels.

20 patients were recruited, aged 30–69. 7 were women and 13 were men. There were no operative adverse events in their operations undertaken between September 2017 and February 2018. One patient had a short episode of atrial fibrillation on the second postoperative day, and no other complications. At three months the median oxford hip score had risen from 27 (range 14–38) to 46 (31–48). Cobalt and chromium levels were almost undetectable at 3 months. Fixation appeared satisfactory in all patients, with no migration detected in either component. CTRSA is in process.

The initial safety of a novel cementless ceramic resurfacing device is demonstrated by this data. The 10 year, 250 case efficacy study will continue in 5 other European centres.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 11 - 11
1 Aug 2018
Muirhead-Allwood S Logishetty K van Arkel R Ng G Cobb J Jeffers J
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The hip joint capsular ligaments (CL) passively restrain extreme range of motion (ROM) by wrapping around the native femoral head, and protect against impingement, edge loading wear and dislocation. This study compared how ligament function was affected by device (hip resurfacing arthroplasty, HRA; dual mobility total hip arthroplasty, DM-THA; and conventional THA, C-THA), with and without CL repair. It was hypothesized that ligament function would only be preserved when native anatomy was preserved: with restoration of head-size (HRA or DM-THA) and repair.

Eight normal male cadaveric hips were skeletonised, retaining the hip capsule. CL function was quantified by measuring ROM by internally (IR) and externally rotating (ER) the hip in six functional positions, ranging from full extension with abduction to full flexion with adduction (squatting). Native ROM was compared to ROM after posterior capsulotomy and HRA, and C-THA and DM-THA, before and after surgical CL repair.

ROM increased most following C-THA (max 62°), then DM-THA (max 40°), then HRA (max 19°), indicating later engagement of the capsule and reduced biomechanical function with smaller head-size. Dislocations also occurred in squatting after C-THA and DM-THA. CL-repair following HRA restored ROM to the native hip (max 8°). CL-repair following DM-THA reduced ROM hypermobility in flexed positions only and prevented dislocation (max 36°). CL-repair following C-THA did not reduce ROM or prevent dislocation.

When HRA was combined with repair, native anatomy was preserved and ligament function was restored. For DM-THA with repair, ligament function depended on the movement of the mobile bearing resulting in near-native function in some positions, but increased ROM when ligaments were unable to wrap around the head/neck. Following C-THA, the reduced head-size resulted in inferior capsular mechanics in all positions as the ligaments remained slack, irrespective of repair.

Choosing devices with anatomic head-sizes (resurfacing or dual-mobility) and repairing the capsular ligaments may protect against instability in the early postoperative period.