header advert
Results 41 - 60 of 984
Results per page:
Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 59 - 59
17 Apr 2023
Pounds G Liu A Jones A Jennings L
Full Access

The aim of this work was to develop a novel, accessible and low-cost method, which is sufficient to measure changes in meniscal position in a whole-knee joint model performing dynamic motion in a knee simulator.

An optical tracking method using motion markers, MATLAB (MATLAB, The MathWorks Inc.) and a miniature camera system (Raspberry Pi, UK) was developed. Method feasibility was assessed on porcine whole joint knee samples (n = 4) dissected and cemented to be used in the simulator (1). Markers were placed on three regions (medial, posterior, anterior) of the medial meniscus with corresponding reference markers on the tibial plateau, so the relative meniscal position could be calculated. The Leeds high kinematics gait profile scaled to the parameters of a pig (1, 2) was driven in displacement control at 0.5 Hz. Videos were recorded at cycle-3 and cycle-50. Conditions tested were the capsule retained (intact), capsule removed and a medial posterior root tear. Mean relative displacement values were taken at time-points relating to the peaks of the axial force and flexion-extension gait inputs, as well as the range between the maximum and minimum values. A one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey post hoc analysis were used to assess differences (p = 0.05).

The method was able to measure relative meniscal displacement for all three meniscal regions. The medial region showed the greatest difference between the conditions. A significant increase (p < 0.05) for the root tear condition was found at 0.28s and 0.90s (axial load peaks) during cycle-3. Mean relative displacement for the root tear condition decreased by 0.29 mm between cycle-3 and cycle-50 at the 0.28s time-point. No statistically significant differences were found when ranges were compared at cycle-3 and cycle-50.

The method was sensitive to measure a substantial difference in medial-lateral relative displacement between an intact and a torn state. Meniscus extrusion was detected for the root tear condition throughout test duration. Further work will progress onto human specimens and apply an intervention condition.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 35 - 35
17 Apr 2023
Afzal T Jones A Williams S
Full Access

Cam-type femoroacetabular impingement is caused by bone excess on the femoral neck abutting the acetabular rim. This can cause cartilage and labral damage due to increased contact pressure as the cam moves into the acetabulum. However, the damage mechanism and the influence of individual mechanical factors (such as sliding distance) are poorly understood. The aim of this study was to identify the cam sliding distance during impingement for different activities in the hip joint.

Motion data for 12 different motion activities from 18 subjects, were applied to a hip shape model (selected as most likely to cause damage, anteriorly positioned with a maximum alpha angle of 80°). The model comprised of a pointwise representation of the acetabular rim and points on the femoral head and neck where the shape deviated from a sphere (software:Matlab).

The movement of each femoral point was tracked in 3D while an activity motion was applied, and impingement recorded when overlap between a cam point and the acetabular rim occurred. Sliding distance was recorded during impingement for each relevant femoral point.

Angular sliding distances varied for different activities. The highest mean (±SD) sliding distance was for leg-crossing (42.62±17.96mm) and lowest the trailing hip in golf swing (2.17±1.11mm). The high standard deviation in the leg crossing sliding distances, indicates subjects may perform this activity in a different manner.

This study quantified sliding distance during cam impingement for different activities. This is an important parameter for determining how much the hip moves during activities that may cause damage and will provide information for future experimental studies.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 144 - 144
11 Apr 2023
Lineham B Altaie A Harwood P McGonagle D Pandit H Jones E
Full Access

Multiple biochemical biomarkers have been previously investigated for the diagnosis, prognosis and response to treatment of articular cartilage damage, including osteoarthritis (OA). Synovial fluid (SF) biomarker measurement is a potential method to predict treatment response and effectiveness. However, the significance of different biomarkers and their correlation to clinical outcomes remains unclear. This systematic review evaluated current SF biomarkers used in investigation of cartilage degeneration or regeneration in the knee joint and correlated these biomarkers with clinical outcomes following cartilage repair or regeneration interventions.

PubMed, Institute of Science Index, Scopus, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Embase databases were searched. Studies evaluating SF biomarkers and clinical outcomes following cartilage repair intervention were included. Two researchers independently performed data extraction and QUADAS-2 analysis. Biomarker inclusion, change following intervention and correlation with clinical outcome was compared.

9 studies were included. Study heterogeneity precluded meta-analysis. There was significant variation in sampling and analysis. 33 biomarkers were evaluated in addition to microRNA and catabolic/anabolic ratios. Five studies reported on correlation of biomarkers with six biomarkers significantly correlated with clinical outcomes following intervention. However, correlation was only demonstrated in isolated studies.

This review demonstrates significant difficulties in drawing conclusions regarding the importance of SF biomarkers based on the available literature. Improved standardisation for collection and analysis of SF samples is required. Future publications should also focus on clinical outcome scores and seek to correlate biomarkers with progression to further understand the significance of identified markers in a clinical context.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 74 - 74
11 Apr 2023
Gilbert S Jones R White P Mason D
Full Access

Stimulation of the mechanosensitive ion channel, Piezo1 promotes bone anabolism and SNPs in the Piezo1 locus are associated with changes in fracture risk. Osteocytes function as critical regulators of bone homeostasis by sensing mechanical signals. The current study used a human, cell-based physiological, 3D in vitro model of bone to determine whether loading of osteocytes in vitro results in upregulation of the Piezo1 pathway.

Human Y201 MSCs, embedded in type I collagen gels and differentiated to osteocytes for 7-days, were subjected to pathophysiological load (5000 µstrain, 10Hz, 5 mins; n=6) with unloaded cells as controls (n=4). RNA was extracted 1-hr post load and assessed by RNAseq analysis. To mimic mechanical load and activate Piezo1, cells were differentiated to osteocytes for 13 days and treated ± Yoda1 (5µM, 2- and 24-hs, n=4); vehicle treated cells served as controls (n=4). RNA was subjected to RT-qPCR and data normalised to the housekeeping gene, YWHAZ. Media was analysed for IL6 release by ELISA.

Mechanical load upregulated Piezo1 gene expression (16.5-fold, p<0.001) and expression of the transcription factor NFATc1, and matricellular protein CYR61, known regulators of Piezo1 mechanotransduction (3-fold; p= 5.0E-5 and 6.8-fold; p= 6.0E-5, respectively). After 2-hrs, Yoda1 increased the expression of the early mechanical response gene, cFOS (11-fold; p=0.021), mean Piezo1 expression (2.3-fold) and IL-6 expression (103-fold, p<0.001). Yoda1 increased the release of IL6 protein after 24 hours (7.5-fold, p=0.001).

This study confirms Piezo1 as an important mechanosensor in osteocytes. Piezo1 activation mediated an increase in IL6, a cytokine that drives inflammation and bone resorption providing a direct link between mechanical activation of Piezo1, bone remodeling and inflammation, which may contribute to mechanically induced joint degeneration in diseases such as osteoarthritis. Mechanistically, we hypothesize this may occur through promoting Ca2+ influx and activation of the NFATc1 signaling pathway.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 39 - 39
11 Apr 2023
Jones R Gilbert S Mason D
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a common cause of chronic pain. Subchondral bone is highly innervated, and bone structural changes directly correlate with pain in OA. Mechanisms underlying skeletal–neural interactions are under-investigated. Bone derived axon guidance molecules are known to regulate bone remodelling. Such signals in the nervous system regulate neural plasticity, branching and neural inflammation. Perturbation of these signals during OA disease progression may disrupt sensory afferents activity, affecting tissue integrity, nociception, and proprioception.

Osteocyte mechanical loading and IL-6 stimulation alters axon guidance signalling influencing innervation, proprioception, and nociception.

Human Y201 MSC cells, embedded in 3D type I collagen gels (0.05 × 106 cell/gel) in 48 well plastic or silicone (load) plates, were differentiated to osteocytes for 7 days before stimulation with IL-6 (5ng/ml) with soluble IL-6 receptor (sIL-6r (40ng/ml) or unstimulated (n=5/group), or mechanically loaded (5000 μstrain, 10Hz, 3000 cycles) or not loaded (n=5/group). RNA extracted 1hr and 24hrs post load was quantified by RNAseq whole transcriptome analysis (NovaSeq S1 flow cell 2 × 100bp PE reads and differentially expressed neurotransmitters identified (>2-fold change in DEseq2 analysis on normalised count data with FDR p<0.05). After 24 hours, extracted IL-6 stimulated RNA was quantified by RT-qPCR for neurotrophic factors using 2–∆∆Ct method (efficiency=94-106%) normalised to reference gene GAPDH (stability = 1.12 REfinder). Normally distributed data with homogenous variances was analysed by two-tailed t test.

All detected axonal guidance genes were regulated by mechanical load. Axonal guidance genes were both down-regulated (Netrin1 0.16-fold, p=0.001; Sema3A 0.4-fold, p<0.001; SEMA3C (0.4-fold, p<0.001), and up-regulated (SLIT2 2.3-fold, p<0.001; CXCL12 5-fold, p<0.001; SEMA3B 13-fold, p<0.001; SEMA4F 2-fold, p<0.001) by mechanical load. IL6 and IL6sR stimulation upregulated SEMA3A (7-fold, p=0.01), its receptor Plexin1 (3-fold, p=0.03). Neutrophins analysed in IL6 stimulated RNA did not show regulation.

Here we show osteocytes regulate multiple factors which may influence innervation, nociception, and proprioception upon inflammatory or mechanical insult. Future studies will establish how these factors may combine and affect nerve activity during OA disease progression.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 20 - 20
11 Apr 2023
Hamilton R Holt C Hamilton D Garcia A Graham C Jones R Shilabeer D Kuiper J Sparkes V Khot S Mason D
Full Access

Mechanical loading of joints with osteoarthritis (OA) results in pain-related functional impairment, altered joint mechanics and physiological nociceptor interactions leading to an experience of pain. However, the current tools to measure this are largely patient reported subjective impressions of a nociceptive impact. A direct measure of nociception may offer a more objective indicator. Specifically, movement-induced physiological responses to nociception may offer a useful way to monitor knee OA. In this study, we gathered preliminary data on healthy volunteers to analyse whether integrated biomechanical and physiological sensor datasets could display linked and quantifiable information to a nociceptive stimulus.

Following ethical approval, 15 healthy volunteers completed 5 movement and stationary activities in 2 conditions; a control setting and then repeated with an applied quantified thermal pain stimulus to their right knee. An inertial measurement unit (IMU) and an electromyography (EMG) lower body marker set were tested and integrated with ground reaction force (GRF) data collection. Galvanic skin response electrodes for skin temperature and conductivity and photoplethysmography (PPG) sensors were manually timestamped to the integrated system.

Pilot data showed EMG, GRF and IMU fluctuations within 0.5 seconds of each other in response to a thermal trigger. Preliminary analysis on the 15 participants tested has shown skin conductance, PPG, EMG, GRFs, joint angles and kinematics with varying increases and fluctuations during the thermal condition in comparison to the control condition.

Preliminary results suggest physiological and biomechanical data outputs can be linked and identified in response to a defined nociceptive stimulus. Study data is currently founded on healthy volunteers as a proof-of-concept. Further exploratory statistical and sensor readout pattern analysis, alongside early and late-stage OA patient data collection, can provide the information for potential development of wearable nociceptive sensors to measure disease progression and treatment effectiveness.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 122 - 122
11 Apr 2023
Chen L Zheng M Chen Z Peng Y Jones C Graves S Chen P Ruan R Papadimitriou J Carey-Smith R Leys T Mitchell C Huang Y Wood D Bulsara M Zheng M
Full Access

To determine the risk of total knee replacement (TKR) for primary osteoarthritis (OA) associated with overweight/obesity in the Australian population.

This population-based study analyzed 191,723 cases of TKR collected by the Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Registry and population data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The time-trend change in incidence of TKR relating to BMI was assessed between 2015-2018. The influence of obesity on the incidence of TKR in different age and gender groups was determined. The population attributable fraction (PAF) was then calculated to estimate the effect of obesity reduction on TKR incidence.

The greatest increase in incidence of TKR was seen in patients from obese class III. The incidence rate ratio for having a TKR for obesity class III was 28.683 at those aged 18-54 years but was 2.029 at those aged >75 years. Females in obesity class III were 1.7 times more likely to undergo TKR compared to similarly classified males. The PAFs of TKR associated with overweight or obesity was 35%, estimating 12,156 cases of TKR attributable to obesity in 2018. The proportion of TKRs could be reduced by 20% if overweight and obese population move down one category.

Obesity has resulted in a significant increase in the incidence of TKR in the youngest population in Australia. The impact of obesity is greatest in the young and the female population. Effective strategies to reduce the national obese population could potentially reduce 35% of the TKR, with over 10,000 cases being avoided.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 57 - 57
11 Apr 2023
Etchels L Wang L Thompson J Wilcox R Jones A
Full Access

Variations in component positioning of total hip replacements can lead to edge loading of the liner, and potentially affect device longevity. These effects are evaluated using ISO 14242:4 edge loading test results in a dynamic system. Mediolateral translation of one of the components during testing is caused by a compressed spring, and therefore the kinematics will depend on the spring stiffness and damping coefficient, and the mass of the translating component and fixture. This study aims to describe the sensitivity of the liner plastic strain to these variables, to better understand how tests using different simulator designs might produce different amounts of liner rim deformation.

A dynamic explicit deformable finite element model with 36mm Pinnacle metal-on-polyethylene bearing geometry (DePuy Synthes, Leeds, UK) was used with material properties for conventional UHMWPE. Setup was 65° clinical inclination, 4mm mismatch, 70N swing phase load, and 100N/mm spring. Fixture mass was varied from 0.5-5kg, spring damping coefficient was varied from 0-2Ns/mm. They were changed independently, and in combination.

Maximum separation values were relatively insensitive to changes in the mass, damping coefficient, or both. The sensitivity of peak plastic strain, to this range of inputs, was similar to changing the swing phase load from 70N to approximately 150N – 200N. Increasing the fixture mass and/or damping coefficient increased the peak plastic strain, with values from 0.15-0.19.

Liner plastic deformation was sensitive to the spring damping and fixture mass, which may explain some of the differences in fatigue and deformation results in UHMWPE liners tested on different machines or with modified fixtures. These values should be described when reporting the results of ISO14242:4 testing.

Acknowledgements

Funded by EPSRC grant EP/N02480X/1; CAD supplied by DePuy Synthes.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 18 - 18
4 Apr 2023
Stanley A Jones G Edwards T Lex J Jaere M
Full Access

Knee pain is common, representing a significant socioeconomic burden. Caused by a variety of pathologies, its evaluation in primary-care is challenging. Subsequently, an over-reliance on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) exists. Prior to orthopaedic surgeon referral, many patients receive no, or incorrect, imaging. Electronic-triage (e-triage) tools represent an innovative solution to address this problem. The primary aim of this study was to ascertain whether an e-triage tool is capable of outperforming existing clinical pathways to determine the correct pre-hospital imaging based on knee pain diagnosis.

Patients ≥18 years with a new presentation of knee pain were retrospectively identified. The timing and appropriateness of imaging was assessed. A symptom-based e-triage tool was developed, using the Amazon LEXbotplatform, and piloted to predict five common knee pathologies and suggest appropriate imaging.

1462 patients were identified. 17% of arthroplasty patients received an ‘unnecessary MRI’, whilst 28% of arthroscopy patients did not have a ‘necessary MRI’, thus requiring a follow-up appointment, with a mean delay of three months (SD 2.6, range 0.2-20.2). Using NHS tariffs, a wasted cost through unnecessary/necessary MRIs and subsequent follow-up appointments was estimated at £45,816. The e-triage pilot was trialled with 41 patients (mean age:58.4 years, 58.5% female). Preliminary diagnoses were available for 34 patients. Using the highest proportion of reported symptoms in the corresponding group, the e-triage tool correctly identified three of the four knee pathologies. The e-triage tool did not correctly identify anterior cruciate ligament injuries (n=3). 79.2% of participants would use the tool again.

A significant number of knee pathology patients received incorrect imaging prior to their initial hospital appointment, incurring delays and unnecessary costs. A symptom-based e-triage tool was developed, with promising pilot data and user feedback. With refinement, this tool has the potential to improve wait-times and referral quality, whilst reducing costs.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 3 | Pages 146 - 157
7 Mar 2023
Camilleri-Brennan J James S McDaid C Adamson J Jones K O'Carroll G Akhter Z Eltayeb M Sharma H

Aims

Chronic osteomyelitis (COM) of the lower limb in adults can be surgically managed by either limb reconstruction or amputation. This scoping review aims to map the outcomes used in studies surgically managing COM in order to aid future development of a core outcome set.

Methods

A total of 11 databases were searched. A subset of studies published between 1 October 2020 and 1 January 2011 from a larger review mapping research on limb reconstruction and limb amputation for the management of lower limb COM were eligible. All outcomes were extracted and recorded verbatim. Outcomes were grouped and categorized as per the revised Williamson and Clarke taxonomy.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 3 | Pages 129 - 137
1 Mar 2023
Patel A Edwards TC Jones G Liddle AD Cobb J Garner A

Aims

The metabolic equivalent of task (MET) score examines patient performance in relation to energy expenditure before and after knee arthroplasty. This study assesses its use in a knee arthroplasty population in comparison with the widely used Oxford Knee Score (OKS) and EuroQol five-dimension index (EQ-5D), which are reported to be limited by ceiling effects.

Methods

A total of 116 patients with OKS, EQ-5D, and MET scores before, and at least six months following, unilateral primary knee arthroplasty were identified from a database. Procedures were performed by a single surgeon between 2014 and 2019 consecutively. Scores were analyzed for normality, skewness, kurtosis, and the presence of ceiling/floor effects. Concurrent validity between the MET score, OKS, and EQ-5D was assessed using Spearman’s rank.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 10 - 10
23 Feb 2023
Hardwick-Morris M Twiggs J Miles B Jones E Bruce WJM Walter WL
Full Access

Dislocation is one of the most common complications in total hip arthroplasty (THA) and is primarily driven by bony or prosthetic impingement. The aim of this study was two-fold. First, to develop a simulation that incorporates the functional position of the femur and pelvis and instantaneously determines range of motion (ROM) limits. Second, to assess the number of patients for whom their functional bony alignment escalates impingement risk.

468 patients underwent a preoperative THA planning protocol that included functional x-rays and a lower limb CT scan. The CT scan was segmented and landmarked, and the x-rays were measured for pelvic tilt, femoral rotation, and preoperative leg length discrepancy (LLD). All patients received 3D templating with the same implant combination (Depuy; Corail/Pinnacle). Implants were positioned according to standardised criteria.

Each patient was simulated in a novel ROM simulation that instantaneously calculates bony and prosthetic impingement limits in functional movements. Simulated motions included flexion and standing-external rotation (ER). Each patient's ROM was simulated with their bones oriented in both functional and neutral positions.

13% patients suffered a ROM impingement for functional but not neutral extension-ER. As a result, 48% patients who failed the functional-ER simulation would not be detected without consideration of the functional bony alignment. 16% patients suffered a ROM impingement for functional but not neutral flexion. As a result, 65% patients who failed the flexion simulation would not be detected without consideration of the functional bony alignment.

We have developed a ROM simulation for use with preoperative planning for THA surgery that can solve bony and prosthetic impingement limits instantaneously. The advantage of our ROM simulation over previous simulations is instantaneous impingement detection, not requiring implant geometries to be analysed prior to use, and addressing the functional position of both the femur and pelvis.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 9 - 9
23 Feb 2023
Hardwick-Morris M Twiggs J Miles B Jones E Bruce WJM Walter WL
Full Access

In 2021, Vigdorchik et al. published a large multicentre study validating their simple Hip-Spine Classification for determining patient-specific acetabular component positioning in total hip arthroplasty (THA). The purpose of our study was to apply this Hip-Spine Classification to a sample of Australian patients undergoing THA surgery to determine the local acetabular component positioning requirements. Additionally, we propose a modified algorithm for adjusting cup anteversion requirements.

790 patients who underwent THA surgery between January 2021 and June 2022 were assessed for anterior pelvic plane tilt (APPt) and sacral slope (SS) in standing and relaxed seated positions and categorized according to their spinal stiffness and flatback deformity. Spinal stiffness was measured using pelvic mobility (PM); the ΔSS between standing and relaxed seated. Flatback deformity was defined by APPt <−13° in standing. As in Vigdorchik et al., PM of <10° was considered a stiff spine. For our algorithm, PM of <20° indicated the need for increased cup anteversion. Using this approach, patient-specific cup anteversion is increased by 1° for every degree the patient's PM is <20°.

According to the Vigdorchik simple Hip-Spine classification groups, we found: 73% Group 1A, 19% Group 1B, 5% Group 2A, and 3% Group 2B. Therefore, under this classification, 27% of Australian THA patients would have an elevated risk of dislocation due to spinal deformity and/or stiffness. Under our modified definition, 52% patients would require increased cup anteversion to address spinal stiffness.

The Hip-Spine Classification is a simple algorithm that has been shown to indicate to surgeons when adjustments to acetabular cup anteversion are required to account for spinal stiffness or flatback deformity. We investigated this algorithm in an Australian population of patients undergoing THA and propose a modified approach: increasing cup anteversion by 1° for every degree the patient's PM is <20°.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 31 - 31
23 Feb 2023
Hong N Jones C Hong T
Full Access

Ideberg-Goss type VI/AO F2(4) glenoid fossa fractures are a rare and complex injury. Although some advocate non-operative management, grossly displaced glenoid fossa fractures in the young patient may warrant fixation. Current approaches still describe difficulty with access of the entirety of the glenoid, particularly the postero-superior quadrant.

We present 2 cases of Ideberg-Goss type VI/AO F2(4) glenoid fossa fractures treated with fixation through a novel “Deltoid Takedown” approach, which allows safe access to the whole glenoid with satisfactory clinical results at 5 and 7 years respectively.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 24 - 24
23 Feb 2023
Marinova M Houghton E Seymour H Jones CW
Full Access

Ankle fractures in the elderly are common and have a mortality rate of 12% within the first year. Treatment is challenging due to osteoporotic bone and patient co-morbidities. Many patients struggle with non-weight-bearing (NWB) and presently there is no consensus in the literature regarding optimum management of these injuries.

We hypothesised that early weight-bearing in frail patients, Clinical Frailty scale (CFS) score of 4 or more will reduce morbidity and allow patients to return to their usual place of residence faster without jeopardising clinical outcome.

We conducted a retrospective analysis of 80 patients aged over 65 years managed at Fiona Stanley Hospital for ankle fractures between January 2016 and 2018. Patients were divided into two cohorts: 40 patients managed NWB and 40 who were permitted to weight-bear as tolerated (WBAT). Patients were stratified as fit (CFS 1–3) or frail (CFS 4+). Primary outcomes were one-year mortality, return to primary residence at six weeks and complications. Secondary outcomes included length of acute hospital stay and rehab stay.

For frail patients, those managed NWB stayed in rehab for 19 days longer (p=0.03) and had 28% more complications (p=0.03). By 6 weeks, fewer patients returned to full weight-bearing (p=0.03) and fewer patients had returned home (p=0.01). For fit patients, there were no significant differences in primary outcomes between NWB and WBAT.

Our novel study categorising patients by CSF demonstrates that early mobilisation in frail patients results in improved outcomes. Currently there is no formal treatment protocol for the management of ankle fractures in the elderly, and we hope that our proposed algorithm will assist surgeons at our institution and elsewhere.

Our study suggests that WBAT may benefit frail patients. We propose a protocol to assist in the management of geriatric ankle fracture patients based on clinical frailty scores.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 16 - 16
10 Feb 2023
Gibson A Guest M Taylor T Gwynne Jones D
Full Access

The purpose of this study was to determine whether there have been changes in the complexity of femoral fragility fractures presenting to our Dunedin Orthopaedic Department, New Zealand, over a period of ten years.

Patients over the age of 60 presenting with femoral fragility fractures to Dunedin Hospital in 2009 −10 (335 fractures) were compared with respect to demographic data, incidence rates, fracture classification and treatment details to the period 2018-19 (311 fractures). Pathological and high velocity fractures were excluded.

The gender proportion and average age (83.1 vs 83.0 years) was unchanged. The overall incidence of femoral fractures in people over 60 years in our region fell by 27% (p<0.001). Intracapsular fractures (31 B1 and B2) fell by 29% (p=0.03) and stable trochanteric fractures by 56% (p<0.001). The incidence of unstable trochanteric fractures (31A2 and 31A3) increased by 84.5% from 3.5 to 6.4/10,000 over 60 years (p = 0.04). The proportion of trochanteric fractures treated with an intramedullary (IM) nail increased from 8% to 37% (p <0.001). Fewer intracapsular fractures were treated by internal fixation (p<0.001) and the rate of acute total hip joint replacements increased from 13 to 21% (p=0.07). The incidence of femoral shaft fractures did not change significantly with periprosthetic fractures comprising 70% in both cohorts.

While there has been little difference in the numbers there has been a decrease in the incidence of femoral fragility fractures likely due to the increasing use of bisphosphonates. However, the incidence of unstable trochanteric fractures is increasing. This has led to the increased use of IM nails which are increasingly used for stable fractures as well.

The increasing complexity of femoral fragility fractures is likely to have an impact on implant use, theatre time and cost.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 34 - 34
10 Feb 2023
Farey J Chai Y Xu J Sadeghpour A Marsden-Jones D Baker N Vigdorchik J Walter W
Full Access

Imageless computer navigation systems have the potential to improve acetabular cup position in total hip arthroplasty (THA), thereby reducing the risk of revision surgery. This study aimed to evaluate the accuracy of three alternate registration planes in the supine surgical position generated using imageless navigation for patients undergoing THA via the direct anterior approach (DAA).

Fifty-one participants who underwent a primary THA for osteoarthritis were assessed in the supine position using both optical and inertial sensor imageless navigation systems. Three registration planes were recorded: the anterior pelvic plane (APP) method, the anterior superior iliac spines (ASIS) functional method, and the Table Tilt (TT) functional method. Post-operative acetabular cup position was assessed using CT scans and converted to radiographic inclination and anteversion. Two repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Bland-Altman plots were used to assess errors and agreement of the final cup position.

For inclination, the mean absolute error was lower using the TT functional method (2.4°±1.7°) than the ASIS functional method (2.8°±1.7°, ρ = .17), and the ASIS anatomic method (3.7°±2.1, ρ < .001). For anteversion, the mean absolute error was significantly lower for the TT functional method (2.4°±1.8°) than the ASIS functional method (3.9°±3.2°, ρ = .005), and the ASIS anatomic method (9.1°±6.2°, ρ < .001). All measurements were within ± 10° for the TT method, but not the ASIS functional or APP methods.

A functional registration plane is preferable to an anatomic reference plane to measure intra-operative acetabular cup inclination and anteversion accurately. Accuracy may be further improved by registering patient location using their position on the operating table rather than anatomic landmarks, particularly if a tighter target window of ± 5° is desired.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 2 - 2
23 Jan 2023
Newton Ede M Pearson MJ Philp AM Cooke ME Nicholson T Grover LM Jones SW
Full Access

To determine whether spinal facet osteoblasts at the curve apex display a different phenotype to osteoblasts from outside the curve in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). Intrinsic differences in the phenotype of spinal facet bone tissue and in spinal osteoblasts have been implicated in the pathogenesis of AIS. However, no study has compared the phenotype of facet osteoblasts at the curve apex with the facet osteoblasts from outside the curve in patients with AIS.

Facet bone tissue was collected from three sites, the concave and convex side at the curve apex and from outside the curve from three female patients with AIS (aged 13–16 years). Micro-CT analysis was used to determine the density and trabecular structure. Osteoblasts were then cultured from the sampled bone. Osteoblast phenotype was investigated by assessing cellular proliferation (MTS assay), cellular metabolism (alkaline phosphatase and Seahorse Analyser), bone nodule mineralisation (Alizarin red assay), and the mRNA expression of Wnt signalling genes (quantitative RT-PCR).

Convex bone showed greater bone mineral density and trabecular thickness than did concave bone. The convex side of the curve apex exhibited a significantly higher proliferative and metabolic phenotype and a greater capacity to form mineralised bone nodules than did concave osteoblasts. mRNA expression of SKP2 was significantly greater in both concave and convex osteoblasts than in non-curve osteoblasts. The expression of SFRP1 was significantly downregulated in convex osteoblasts compared with either concave or non-curve.

Intrinsic differences that affect osteoblast function are exhibited by spinal facet osteoblasts at the curve apex in patients with AIS.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 12 | Pages 960 - 968
23 Dec 2022
Hardwick-Morris M Wigmore E Twiggs J Miles B Jones CW Yates PJ

Aims

Leg length discrepancy (LLD) is a common pre- and postoperative issue in total hip arthroplasty (THA) patients. The conventional technique for measuring LLD has historically been on a non-weightbearing anteroposterior pelvic radiograph; however, this does not capture many potential sources of LLD. The aim of this study was to determine if long-limb EOS radiology can provide a more reproducible and holistic measurement of LLD.

Methods

In all, 93 patients who underwent a THA received a standardized preoperative EOS scan, anteroposterior (AP) radiograph, and clinical LLD assessment. Overall, 13 measurements were taken along both anatomical and functional axes and measured twice by an orthopaedic fellow and surgical planning engineer to calculate intraoperator reproducibility and correlations between measurements.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 52 - 52
1 Dec 2022
Hawker G Bohm E Dunbar M Jones CA Ravi B Noseworthy T Woodhouse L Faris P Dick DA Powell J Paul P Marshall D
Full Access

With the rising rates, and associated costs, of total knee arthroplasty (TKA), enhanced clarity regarding patient appropriateness for TKA is warranted. Towards addressing this gap, we elucidated in qualitative research that surgeons and osteoarthritis (OA) patients considered TKA need, readiness/willingness, health status, and expectations of TKA most important in determining patient appropriateness for TKA. The current study evaluated the predictive validity of pre-TKA measures of these appropriateness domains for attainment of a good TKA outcome.

This prospective cohort study recruited knee OA patients aged 30+ years referred for TKA at two hip/knee surgery centers in Alberta, Canada. Those receiving primary, unilateral TKA completed questionnaires pre-TKA assessing TKA need (WOMAC-pain, ICOAP-pain, NRS-pain, KOOS-physical function, Perceived Arthritis Coping Efficacy, prior OA treatment), TKA readiness/willingness (Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS), willingness to undergo TKA), health status (PHQ-8, BMI, MSK and non-MSK comorbidities), TKA expectations (HSS KR Expectations survey items) and contextual factors (e.g., age, gender, employment status). One-year post-TKA, we assessed for a ‘good outcome’ (yes/no), defined as improved knee symptoms (OARSI-OMERACT responder criteria) AND overall satisfaction with TKA results. Multiple logistic regression, stepwise variable selection, and best possible subsets regression was used to identify the model with the smallest number of independent variables and greatest discriminant validity for our outcome. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves were generated to compare the discriminative ability of each appropriateness domain based on the ‘area under the ROC curve’ (AUC). Multivariable robust Poisson regression was used to assess the relationship of the variables to achievement of a good outcome.

f 1,275 TKA recipients, 1,053 (82.6%) had complete data for analyses (mean age 66.9 years [SD 8.8]; 58.6% female). Mean WOMAC pain and KOOS-PS scores were 11.5/20 (SD 3.5) and 52.8/100 (SD 17.1), respectively. 78.1% (95% CI 75.4–80.5%) achieved a good outcome. Stepwise variable selection identified optimal discrimination was achieved with 13 variables. The three best 13-variable models included measures of TKA need (WOMAC pain, KOOS-PS), readiness/willingness (PASS, TKA willingness), health status (PHQ-8, troublesome hips, contralateral knee, low back), TKA expectations (the importance of improved psychological well-being, ability to go up stairs, kneel, and participate in recreational activities as TKA outcomes), and patient age. Model discrimination was fair for TKA need (AUC 0.68, 95% CI 0.63-0.72), TKA readiness/willingness (AUC 0.61, 95% CI 0.57-0.65), health status (AUC 0.59, 95% CI 0.54-0.63) and TKA expectations (AUC 0.58, 95% CI 0.54-0.62), but the model with all appropriateness variables had good discrimination (AUC 0.72, 95% CI 0.685-0.76). The likelihood of achieving a good outcome was significantly higher for those with greater knee pain, disability, unacceptable knee symptoms, definite willingness to undergo TKA, less depression who considered improved ability to perform recreational activities or climb stairs ‘very important’ TKA outcomes, and lower in those who considered it important that TKA improve psychological wellbeing or ability to kneel.

Beyond surgical need (OA symptoms) and health status, assessment of patients’ readiness and willingness to undergo, and their expectations for, TKA, should be incorporated into assessment of patient appropriateness for surgery.