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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 60 - 60
1 Apr 2018
Anderson C Golladay G Roche M Gustke K Elson L
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Introduction & Aims

The traditional method of soft-tissue balancing during TKA is subjective in nature, and stiffness and instability are common indications for revision, suggesting that TKA balancing by subjective assessment is suboptimal. This study examines the intraoperative mediolateral loads measured with a nanosensor-enabled tibial insert trial and the sequential balancing steps used to achieve quantitative balance. Data obtained from a prospective multicenter study was assessed to determine the effect of targeted ligament release on intra-articular loading, and to understand which types of releases are necessary to achieve quantified ligament balance.

Methods

A group of 129 patients received sensor-assisted TKA, as part of a prospective multicenter study. Medial and lateral loading data were collected pre-release, during any sequential releases, and post-release. All data were collected at 10, 45, and 90 degrees during range of motion testing. Ligament release type, release technique type, and resultant loading were collected.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 18 - 18
1 Apr 2018
Preutenborbeck M Holub O Anderson J Jones A Hall R Williams S
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Introduction

Up to 60% of total hip arthroplasties (THA) in Asian populations arise from avascular necrosis (AVN), a bone disease that can lead to femoral head collapse. Current diagnostic methods to classify AVN have poor reproducibility and are not reliable in assessing the fracture risk. Femoral heads with an immediate fracture risk should be treated with a THA, conservative treatments are only successful in some cases and cause unnecessary patient suffering if used inappropriately. There is potential to improve the assessment of the fracture risk by using a combination of density-calibrated computed tomographic (QCT) imaging and engineering beam theory. The aim of this study was to validate the novel fracture prediction method against in-vitro compression tests on a series of six human femur specimens.

Methods

Six femoral heads from six subjects were tested, a subset (n=3) included a hole drilled into the subchondral area of the femoral head via the femoral neck (University of Leeds, ethical approval MEEC13-002). The simulated lesions provided a method to validate the fracture prediction model with respect of AVN.

The femoral heads were then modelled by a beam loaded with a single joint contact load. Material properties were assigned to the beam model from QCT-scans by using a density-modulus relationship. The maximum joint loading at which each bone cross-section was likely to fracture was calculated using a strain based failure criterion.

Based on the predicted fracture loads, all six femoral heads (validation set) were classified into two groups, high fracture risk and low fracture risk (Figure 1). Beam theory did not allow for an accurate fracture load to be found because of the geometry of the femoral head. Therefore the predicted fracture loads of each of the six femoral heads was compared to the mean fracture load from twelve previously analysed human femoral heads (reference set) without lesions.

The six cemented femurs were compression tested until failure. The subjects with a higher fracture risk were identified using both the experimental and beam tool outputs.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 51 - 51
1 Apr 2018
Avadi MS Meng L Anderson J Fisher J Wang M Jin Z Qiu Y Williams S
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INTRODUCTION

Avascular necrosis (AVN) of the femoral head (FH) initiates from biological disruptions in the bone and may progress to mechanical failure of the hip. Mechanical and structural properties of AVN bone have not been widely reported, however such understanding is important when designing therapies for AVN. Brown et al.[1] assessed mechanical properties of different regions of AVN FH bone and reported 52% reduction in yield strength and 72% reduction in elastic modulus of necrotic regions when compared to non-necrotic bone. This study aimed to characterise structural and mechanical properties of FH bone with AVN and understand the relationship between lesion volume and associated mechanical properties.

METHODS

Twenty FH specimens from patients undergoing hip arthroplasty for AVN and six non-pathological cadaveric FH controls were collected. Samples were computed tomography scanned and images analysed for percentage lesion volume with respect to FH volume. Samples were further divided for structural and mechanical testing. The mechanical property group were further processed to remove 9mm cylindrical bone plugs from the load bearing and non-load-bearing regions of the FHs. FH and bone plug samples were tested in compression (1mm/min); elastic modulus and yield stress were calculated.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 50 - 50
1 Jan 2018
Makarewich CA Christensen M Anderson M Gililland J Pelt C Peters C
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Total hip arthroplasty (THA) in the young patient has been associated with higher rates of revision and perioperative complications. For clinicians and patients alike, there remains a desire to better characterize the durability of THA in young patients. We reviewed secondary data from our institutional database for all patients who underwent primary THA from January 2000 to May 2015. Patients were identified using ICD-9 procedure code 81.51. Our primary interest was the survival of implants in patients 30 years of age or younger (n=167) while using a contemporaneous cohort of patients age 60 and older as a control (n=1359). Failure was defined as revision THA for any reason. Cox regression with robust standard errors was used to calculate hazard ratios. A population-averaged Poisson regression analysis was used to compare complication rates.

The rate of all-cause revision THA was 2.4 times greater (95% CI 1.10 – 5.37, p=0.028) in young patients (7%, 12/167) undergoing primary or conversion to THA compared to their elderly counterparts (3.7%, 50/1,359). Survival at 10 years was 89% (95% CI 82 – 94) in the young cohort and 96% (94 – 97) in the elderly cohort. The primary reasons for revision in young that patients compared to their elderly counterparts included metal-on-metal implants (IRR 8.12, 95% CI 2.04 – 32.38, p=0.003).

These data demonstrate that patients 30 years of age and younger substantially benefit from THA but should be warned of higher risk of subsequent revision.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_22 | Pages 29 - 29
1 Dec 2017
Anderson R Bates-Powell J Cole C Kulkarni S Moore E Norrish A Nickerson E
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Aim

This study aimed to evaluate the impact on length of hospital stay from dedicated infectious diseases input for orthopaedic infection patients compared to sporadic infection specialist input.

Method

We conducted an observational cohort study of 157 adults with orthopaedic infections at a teaching hospital in the UK. The orthopaedic infections included were: osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, infected metalwork and prosthetic joint infections, and adults were aged 18 years or more. Prior to August 2016, advice on orthopaedic infection patients was adhoc with input principally from the on-call infectious diseases registrar and phone calls to microbiology whereas after August 2016 these patients received regular input from dedicated infectious diseases doctor(s). The dedicated input involved bedside reviews, medical management, correct antimicrobial prescribing, managing adverse drug reactions, increased use of outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) services especially self-administration of intravenous antibiotics and shared decision-making for treatment failure, whilst remaining under orthopaedic team care. Orthopaedic patients operated on for management of their infection between 29/8/16 and 15/3/17 were prospectively identified and orthopaedic operation records were used to retrospectively identified patients between 29/8/15 and 15/3/16. The length of stay was compared between the 2 groups.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1343 - 1347
1 Oct 2017
Yalizis MA Ek ETH Anderson H Couzens G Hoy GA

Aims

To determine whether an early return to sport in professional Australian Rules Football players after fixation of a non-thumb metacarpal fracture was safe and effective.

Patients and Methods

A total of 16 patients with a mean age of 25 years (19 to 30) identified as having a non-thumb metacarpal fracture underwent open reduction and internal plate and screw fixation. We compared the players’ professional performance statistics before and after the injury to determine whether there was any deterioration in their post-operative performance.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 6 | Pages 793 - 798
1 Jun 2017
Anderson FL Koch CN Elpers ME Wright TM Haas SB Heyse TJ

Aims

We sought to establish whether an oxidised zirconium (OxZr) femoral component causes less loss of polyethylene volume than a cobalt alloy (CoCr) femoral component in total knee arthroplasty.

Materials and Methods

A total of 20 retrieved tibial inserts that had articulated with OxZr components were matched with 20 inserts from CoCr articulations for patient age, body mass index, length of implantation, and revision diagnosis. Changes in dimensions of the articular surfaces were compared with those of pristine inserts using laser scanning. The differences in volume between the retrieved and pristine surfaces of the two groups were calculated and compared.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 119 - 119
1 Feb 2017
Anderson C Golladay G Roche M Gustke K Leone W
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Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is currently one of the most common elective surgical procedures in the United States. The increase in the proportion of younger patients in receipt of surgery, in concert with a dramatic rise in the incidence of obesity, has contributed to the on-going, exponential increase in the number of arthroplasties performed annually. Despite materials advances for implants, the U.S. revision burden has remained static for the last decade. According to the 2013 CMS MEDPAR file the typical CMS reimbursement falls far short of costs incurred by the hospital, resulting in an average net loss of revenue of $9,539; and over 90% of hospitals lose money for every revision case performed. Today, approximately 5% of all primaries performed will result in an early revision (< 3 years). In order to understand ways with which to mitigate the incidence of early revision due to mechanical complications, a multicentric group of sensor-assisted patients was follow-up out to 3 years.

In this study, 278 sensor-assisted patients were followed out to 3 years. The intraoperative devices used in this study contain microsensors and a processing unit. Kinetic and center of load location data are projected, in real-time, to a screen. Because of the wireless nature of the intraoperative sensors, the patella can be reduced, and kinematic data can be evaluated through the range of motion. For each patient, the soft-tissue envelope was balanced to within a mediolateral differential of 15 lbf., through the ROM, as per the suggestion of previously reported literature. The average patient profile indicates: age = 69.7 years, BMI = 30.4, gender distribution = 36% male/64% female. Any adverse event within the 3-year follow-up interval was captured.

By 3 years, 1 patient in this population has required revision surgeon due to mechanical complicatons. Overall adverse events included: pain in hip (3), pain in contralateral knee (2), wound drainage (3), DVT (1), death (1), stiffness in operative knee (2), infection (3), global pain (2), back pain (2).

Based on the average reported number of early revisions that occur in the U.S. (5% of primaries), it was anticipated for this patient group to require approximately 13 revisions by the 3-year follow-up interval. Using 2013 CMS MEDPAR data, these 13 revisions would have resulted in $124,007 cost-to-hospital. However, only 1 revision (0.4%) was observered, therefore $114,468 in additional costs were spared for the aggregate of participating hospitals. This data suggests that the incorporation of kinetic sensors in TKA may assist the surgeon in achieving soft-tissue balance and thereby avoiding adverse mechanical complications that require surgical intervention.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 4 - 4
1 Feb 2017
Anderson C Gustke K Roche M Golladay G Jerry G Elson L
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Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients are consistently reported to be less satisfied than total hip arthroplasty (THA) patients. A patient's perception of success of his/her own total knee is dictated by their levels of post-operative pain and function, and many return to follow-up visits with inexplicable pain and stiffness that contradict favorable radiographic results. Several of these chief complaints that contribute to dissatisfaction are associated with soft-tissue imbalance. Therefore, in an effort to thoroughly understand the post-operative impact of soft-tissue balance on satisfaction, a multicenter study was conducted to evaluate the satisfaction outcomes of quantifiably balanced patients.

In this study, 102 sensor-assisted patients were followed out to 3 years. The intraoperative devices used in this study project kinetic loading (lbf.) and center of load location data, in real-time, to a screen. Because of the wireless nature of the intraoperative sensors, the patella can be reduced, and kinematic data can be evaluated through the range of motion. The target balance window that was used in this study has been previously reported in literature and includes: 1) a mediolateral differential of 15 lbf., through the ROM, and 2) Sagittal plane stability as determined by a posterior drawer analysis. A robust, face-validated satisfaction survey was administered at 3-year follow-up and included 7 questions with answers on a 5-point Likert scale.

At 3 years, post-operatively, 97.2% of this patient group reported being “satisfied” to “very satisfied” with their procedure, in comparison to the 81% average TKA satisfaction reported in literature (df = 11). The comparative literature included annual satisfaction intervals from 1 to 5 years (n = 33,775) which is comparable to the interval reported in this patient group. The sensor-assisted patient group exhibited a 16% increase in the proportion of satisfaction over what is currently reported in the comparative literature (p = 0.001).

Despite the success rate of TKA, unfavorable patient-reported satisfaction continues to present a problem for operative recipients and surgeons. Because satisfaction is dependent upon several variables – including pain, function, and activity levels – the satisfaction survey used in this study represents a more accurate account of patient perception than many traditional surveys. It was shown that sensor-balanced TKA patients exhibited a 16% increase in the proportion of those reporting being “satisfied” to “very satisfied”, over the average satisfaction reported in literature. Allowing the surgeon to quantitatively balance the soft-tissue envelope, dynamically, has continued to a significant decrease in the proportion of dissatisfaction.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_20 | Pages 49 - 49
1 Nov 2016
Sermer C Kandel R Hurtig M Anderson J Theodoropoulos J
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Osteoarthritis (OA) is a debilitating disease characterised by degradation of articular cartilage and subchondral bone remodeling. Current therapies for early or midstage disease do not regenerate articular cartilage, or fail to integrate the repair tissue with host tissue, and therefore there is great interest in developing biological approaches to cartilage repair. We have shown previously that platelet-rich plasma (PRP) can enhance cartilage tissue formation. PRP is obtained from a patient's own blood, and is an autologous source of many growth factors and other molecules which may aid in healing. This raised the question as to whether PRP could enhance cartilage integration. We hypothesise that PRP will enhance integration of bioengineered cartilage with native cartilage.

Chondrocytes were isolated from bovine metacarpal-phalangeal joints, seeded on a porous bone substitute (calcium polyphosphate) and grown in the presence of FBS to form an in vitro model of osteochondral-like tissue. After 7 days, the biphasic constructs were soaked in PRP for 30 minutes prior to implantation into the core of a ring-shaped biphasic explant of native bovine cartilage and bone. Controls were not soaked in PRP. The resulting implant-explant construct was cultured in a stirring bioreactor in serum free conditions for 2 weeks. The integration zone was visualised histologically. A push-out test was performed to assess the strength of integration. Matrix accumulation at the zone of integration was assessed biochemically and the gene expression of the cells in this region was assessed by RT-PCR. Significance (p<0.05) was assessed by a student's t-test or one-way ANOVA with tukey's post hoc.

PRP soaked bioengineered implants, integrated with the host tissue in 73% of samples, whereas control bioengineered implants only integrated in 19% of samples based on macroscopic evaluation (p<0.05). The integration strength, as determined by the normalised maximum force to failure, was significantly increased in the PRP soaked implant group compared to controls (219 +/− 35.4 kPa and 72.0 +/− 28.5 kPa, respectively, p<0.05). This correlated with an increase in glycosaminoglycan and collagen accumulation in the region of integration in the PRP treated implant group, compared to untreated controls after 2 weeks (p<0.05). Immunohistochemical studies revealed that the integration zone was rich in collagen type II and aggrecan. The cells at the zone of integration in the PRP soaked group had a 2.5 fold increase in aggrecan gene expression (p=0.05) and a 3.5 fold increase in matrix metalloproteinase 13 expression (p<0.05) compared to controls.

PRP soaked bio-engineered cartilage implants showed improved integration with native cartilage compared to non-treated implants, perhaps due to the increased matrix accumulation and remodeling at the interface. Further evaluation is required to determine if PRP improves integration in vivo.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 22 - 22
1 Oct 2016
Ramakrishnan P Maclean M MacGregor SJ Anderson J Grant MH
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Healthcare associated infections (HAI) pose a major threat to patients admitted to hospitals, and infection rates following orthopaedic arthroplasty surgery are as high as 4%, while the infection rates are even higher after revision surgery. 405 nm High-Intensity Narrow Spectrum (HINS) light has been proven to reduce environmental contamination in hospital isolation rooms, and there is potential to develop this technology for application in orthopaedic surgery.

Cultured rat osteoblasts were exposed to 405 nm light to investigate if bactericidal doses of light could be used safely in the presence of mammalian cells. Cell viability was measured by MTT reduction and microscopy techniques, function by alkaline phosphatase activity, and proliferation by the BrdU assay. Exposures of up to a dose of 36 J/cm2 had no significant effect on osteoblast cell viability, whilst exposure of a variety of clinically relevant bacteria, to 36 J/cm2 resulted in up to 100% kill. Exposure to a higher dose of 54 J/cm2 significantly affected the osteoblast cell viability, indicating dose dependency.

Work also demonstrated that 405 nm light exposure induces reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in both mammalian and bacterial cells, as shown by fluorescence generated from 6-carboxy-2′,7′-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate dye. The mammalian cells were significantly protected from dying at 54 J/cm2 by catalase, which detoxifies H2O2. Bacterial cells were significantly protected by sodium pyruvate (H2O2 scavenger) and by a combination of free radical scavengers (sodium pyruvate, dimethyl thiourea (·OH scavenger), catalase) at 162 and 324 J/cm2. Thus the cytotoxic mechanism of 405 nm light in mammalian cells and bacteria is likely oxidative stress involving predominantly H2O2 generation, with other ROS contributing to the damage.

Additional work describing the potential for incorporation of this antimicrobial light within operating theatre lighting systems will also be discussed, and this, coupled with the cell viability and cytotoxicity results, suggests that 405 nm light could have great potential for continual patient safe decontamination during orthopaedic replacement surgeries and thereby reduce the incidence of infections.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 35 - 35
1 Oct 2016
Asif I Williams S Fisher J Al-Hajjar M Anderson J Tipper J
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Wear particles produced by alumina ceramic-on-ceramic (CoC) bearings cause a minimal immunological response with low cytotoxicity and inflammatory potential1, 2. However, more comprehensive immunological studies are yet to be completed for the composite CoC (zirconia-toughened, platelet reinforced alumina) hip replacements due to difficulties in isolating the very low volume of clinically relevant wear debris generated by such materials in vitro. The aim of this study was to compare the cytotoxic effects of clinically relevant cobalt chromium (CoCr) nano-particles with commercial composite ceramic particles.

Composite ceramic particles (commercial BIOLOX® delta powder) were obtained from CeramTec, Germany and clinically relevant CoCr wear particles were generated using a six station pin-on-plate wear simulator. L929 fibroblast cells were cultured with 50µm3 of CoCr wear debris or composite ceramic particles at low to high volumes ranging from 500µm3–0.5µm3 per cell and the cyctotoxic effects of the particles were assessed over a period of 6 days using the ATP-Lite™ cell viability assay.

The composite ceramic particles were bimodal in size (0.1–2µm & 30–100nm) and showed mild cytotoxic effects when compared with equivalent particle volumes (50µm3) of clinically relevant CoCr nano-particles (10–120nm). The CoCr nano-particles had significant cytotoxic effects from day 1, whereas the composite ceramic particles only showed cytotoxic effects at particle concentrations of 50 and 500µm3 after 6 days. The increased cytotoxicity of the clinically relevant CoCr nano-particles may have been attributed to the release of Co and Cr ions.

This study demonstrated the potential cytotoxic effects of model ceramic particles at very high volume concentrations, but it is unlikely that such high particle volumes will be experienced routinely in vivo in such low wearing bearing materials. Future work will investigate the longer-term effects on genotoxicity and oxidative stress of low volumes of clinically-relevant generated BIOLOX® delta ceramic wear particles.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 3 - 3
1 May 2016
Elson L Leone W Roche M Anderson C
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Introduction

The rate of technological innovation in procedural total knee arthroplasty has left little time for critical evaluation of a new technology before the adoption of even newer modalities. With more drastic financial restrictions being placed on operating room spending, orthopaedic surgeons are now required to provide excellent results on a budget.

It is integral that both clinical efficacy and cost-effectiveness of these intraoperative technologies be fully understood in order to provide patients with effectual, economically conscious care. The purpose of this qualitative analysis of literature was to evaluate clinical and economic efficacy of the three most prominent technologies currently used in TKA: computer navigation, patient-specific instrumentation, and kinetic sensors.

Methods

Three hundred and ninety one publications were collected; 100 were included in final qualitative analysis. Criteria for inclusion in the analysis was defined only insofar as that each piece assessed one of the above listed aspects of the three technologies Literature included in the final evaluation contained background information on each respective technology, clinical outcomes, revision rates, and/or cost analyses. All comparisons were conducted in a strictly qualitative manner, and no attempts were made to conduct interstudy statistical analyses due to the high level of variability in methodology and data collected.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 2 - 2
1 May 2016
Elson L Roche M Golladay G Anderson C
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Introduction

Instability after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) represents, in excess of, 7% of reasons for implant failure. This mode of failure is correlated with soft-tissue imbalance, and has continued to be problematic despite advances in implant technology. Thus, understanding the options available to execute safe and effective soft-tissue release is critical to mitigating future complications due to instability. This study aimed to use intraoperative sensors to evaluate a multiple needle puncturing technique (MNPT), in comparison with traditional transection-based release, to determine its biomechanical and clinical efficacy.

Methods

Seventy-five consecutive, cruciate-retaining TKAs were performed, as part of an 8-site multicenter study. All procedures were performed with the use of an intraoperative sensor to ensure quantitative balance, as per previously reported literature. Of the 75-patient cohort, 50 patients were balanced with the MNPT; 20 patients were balanced with traditional transection. All patients were followed out to 1-year, and administered KSS, WOMAC, and satisfaction. Alignment and ROM was captured for all patients, pre-operatively and at the 1-year follow-up interval.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 18 - 18
1 May 2016
Anderson J Campbell P Nelson S
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Avascular necrosis of the femoral head (AVN) is associated with collapse of the femoral head and arthritic degeneration of the joint. The combination of an implant inserted into the femoral head that provides mechanical support and bone grafting to promote bone formation may offer a possible joint-preserving solution1. Seventeen such procedures were performed between November 2012 and March 2014 during an IRB approved clinical trial. Thirteen out of 18 patients remained unrevised at a minimum of 12 months; the results of radiographic and histological analysis of four revisions are presented.

The investigational device (Figure 1) was developed as a joint preserving treatment for AVN with a clinical grade of IIC or less according to the ARCO grading system2.

The device consisted of a braided spherical Nitinol cage with a Titanium / Nitinol orientation feature. It was implanted using fluoroscopic navigation into a spherical cavity cut into the femoral head via an 11mm diameter access tunnel. Once deployed, the implant was filled with a lightly impacted mixture of autologous bone graft and bone marrow soaked Conduit TCP (DePuy CMW, Blackpool, UK). The implant's purpose was to provide mechanical support to the weakened subchondral surface while the bone graft mixture re-integrated with the host bone.

The retrieved femoral heads were trimmed to leave approximately 3mm of bone around the implant, dehydrated, embedded in methacrylate resin, sectioned and thinned into 50–70µm coronal slices for histological analysis. The following observations were made (Figure 2):

Case 1 (Female, age 70, ARCO IIB, revised after 2 days): The patient was revised for spontaneous sub-trochanteric fracture secondary to osteoporosis. Contact between the native bone and bone graft was observed. Marrow elements and repair tissue were visible within the pores in the graft (Figure 2a).

Case 2 (Male, age 67, ARCO IIIC, revised after 82 days): Two wires were broken but retained within the braided structure. A radiolucent gap caused by the presence of fibrous tissue between the graft mixture and native bone was evident suggesting that the implant was unable to prevent progression in this case.

Case 3 (Female, age 70, ARCO IIC, revised after 482 days): The cavity penetrated the subchondral surface; at revision the implant was found to have breached the articular cartilage. There was partial separation of the proximal osteonecrotic fragment and no evidence of graft revascularisation or remodelling within the implant.

Case 4 (Male, age 42, ARCO IIC, revised after 469 days): There was no indication of bone graft re-integration. Collapse of the necrotic bone and deformation of the implant was diagnosed from 1 year follow-up x-rays.

Conclusion

This treatment has preserved the joints of fourteen patients. Of the four revised, two patients had clinical grades or bone quality contra-indicated for the device and three had lesions occupying more than 30% of the femoral head: Improved criteria for patient selection may be required. The device is only partially load-bearing and incapable of stabilising fractures: The radiolucent band associated with fibrous tissue formation may be an early indication of failure.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 19 - 19
1 May 2016
Halloran J Zadzilka J Colbrunn R Bonner T Anderson C Klika A Barsoum W
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Introduction

Improper soft-tissue balancing can result in postoperative complications after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and may lead to early revision. A single-use tibial insert trial with embedded sensor technology (VERASENSE from OrthoSensor Inc., Dania Beach, FL) was designed to provide feedback to the surgeon intraoperatively, with the goal to achieve a “well-balanced” knee throughout the range of motion (Roche et al. 2014). The purpose of this study was to quantify the effects of common soft-tissue releases as they related to sensor measured joint reactions and kinematics.

Methods

Robotic testing was performed using four fresh-frozen cadaveric knee specimens implanted with appropriately sized instrumented trial implants (geometry based on a currently available TKA system). Sensor outputs included the locations and magnitudes of medial and lateral reaction forces. As a measure of tibiofemoral joint kinematics, medial and lateral reaction locations were resolved to femoral anterior-posterior displacement and internal-external tibial rotation (Fig 1.). Laxity style joint loading included discrete applications of ± 100 N A-P, ± 3 N/m I-E and ± 5 N/m varus-valgus (V-V) loads, each applied at 10, 45, and 90° of flexion. All tests included 20 N of compressive force. Laxity tests were performed before and after a specified series of soft-tissue releases, which included complete transection of the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL), superficial medial collateral ligament (sMCL), and the popliteus ligament (Table 1). Sensor outputs were recorded for each quasi-static test. Statistical results were quantified using regression formulas that related sensor outputs (reaction loads and kinematics) as a function of tissue release across all loading conditions. Significance was set for p-values ≤ 0.05.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 1 - 1
1 May 2016
Elson L Roche M Wang K Anderson C
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Introduction

Aseptic loosening has been reported to be the most common, contemporary mode of total knee arthroplasty failure. It has been suggested that the etiology of revision due to loosening can be attributed, in part, to joint imbalance and the variability inherent in standard surgical techniques. Due to the high prevalence of revision, the purpose of this study was to quantify the change in kinetic loading of the knee joint before versus after the application of the final cement-component complex.

Methods

Ninety-two consecutive, cruciate-retaining TKAs were performed, between March 2014 and June 2014, by two collaborating surgeons. Two different knee systems were used, each with a different viscosity cement type (either medium viscosity or high viscosity). All knees were initially balanced using a microelectronic tibial insert, which provides real-time feedback of femoral contact points and joint kinetics. After the post-balance loads were captured, and the surgeon was satisfied with joint balance, the final components were cemented into place, and the sensor was re-inserted to capture any change in loading due to cementing technique.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 18 - 18
1 May 2016
Halloran J Colbrunn R Anderson C
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INTRODUCTION

Understanding the relationship between knee specific tissue behavior and joint contact mechanics remains an area of focus. Seminal work from 1990's established the possibility to optimize tissue properties for recreation of laxity driven kinematics (Mommersteeg et al., 1996). Yet, the uniqueness and validity of such predictions could be strengthened, especially as they relate to joint contact conditions. Understanding this interplay has implications for the long term performance of joint replacements.

Development of instrumented knee implants, highlighted by a single use tibial insert trial with embedded sensor technology (VERASENSE, Orthosensor Inc.), may offer an avenue to establish the relationship between tissue state and joint mechanics. Utilization of related data also has the potential to confirm computational predictions, where both rigid body motions and associated reactions are explicitly accounted for. Hence, the goal of this work was to evaluate an approach for optimization of ligament properties using joint mechanics data from an instrumented implant during laxity style testing. Such a framework could be used to inform joint balancing techniques, improve long term implant performance, and alternatively, qualify factors that may lead to poor outcomes

METHODS

Experimentation was performed on a 52 year old male, left, cadaveric specimen. Joint arthroplasty was performed using standard practice by an experienced orthopedic surgeon. To mimic passive intraoperative loading, laxity loading at 10°, 45° and 90° flexion, which consisted of discrete application of anterior-posterior (± 100N), varus-valgus (± 5 Nm) and internal-external (± 3 Nm) loads at each angle, was performed using a simVITROTM robotic musculoskeletal simulator (Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH). Experimental results included relative tibiofemoral kinematics and sensor measured metrics (Fig 1).

The finite element model was developed from specimen-specific MRIs and solved using Abaqus/Explicit. The model included the rigid bones, appropriately placed implants and relevant soft-tissue structures (Fig. 1). Ligament stiffness values were adopted from the literature and included a 6% strain toe region. Sets of nonlinear springs, defined using MR imaging, comprised each ligament/bundle. Optimization was performed, which minimized the root mean squared difference between VERASENSE measured tibiofemoral mechanics and the model predicted values. Ligament slack lengths were the control variables and the objective included each loading state and all contact metrics (θ, AFD, ML, and LL).


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 5, Issue 2 | Pages 33 - 36
1 Feb 2016
Jenkins PJ Morton A Anderson G Van Der Meer RB Rymaszewski LA

Objectives

“Virtual fracture clinics” have been reported as a safe and effective alternative to the traditional fracture clinic. Robust protocols are used to identify cases that do not require further review, with the remainder triaged to the most appropriate subspecialist at the optimum time for review. The objective of this study was to perform a “top-down” analysis of the cost effectiveness of this virtual fracture clinic pathway.

Methods

National Health Service financial returns relating to our institution were examined for the time period 2009 to 2014 which spanned the service redesign.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 5, Issue 2 | Pages 26 - 32
1 Feb 2016
Wendling A Mar D Wischmeier N Anderson D McIff T

Objectives

The objective of this study was to determine if combining variations in mixing technique of antibiotic-impregnated polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) cement with low frequency ultrasound (LFUS) improves antibiotic elution during the initial high phase (Phase I) and subsequent low phase (Phase II) while not diminishing mechanical strength.

Methods

Three batches of vancomycin-loaded PMMA were prepared with different mixing techniques: a standard technique; a delayed technique; and a control without antibiotic. Daily elution samples were analysed using flow injection analysis (FIA). Beginning in Phase II, samples from each mix group were selected randomly to undergo either five, 15, 45, or 0 minutes of LFUS treatment. Elution amounts between LFUS treatments were analysed. Following Phase II, compression testing was done to quantify strength. A-priorit-tests and univariate ANOVAs were used to compare elution and mechanical test results between the two mix groups and the control group.